International deal to protect ozone layer behind new contaminant problem: study
EDMONTON — A landmark environmental agreement that helped close the ozone hole in the 1990s may have led to new chemical contaminants.
The Montreal Protocol, which came into force in 1989, banned the use of chemicals that were destroying the ozone layer, which helps protect the planet from damaging solar radiation.
It has been signed by 197 parties and is considered the world’s most successful environmental agreement.
But Canadian researchers have found the chemicals used to replace the banned ones are creating issues of their own.