Recovery of the stratospheric ozone layer following the ban on ozone-depleting substances represents one of the most successful examples of international environmental policy. However, the long-term fate of ozone under continuing climate change remains uncertain. We present the first multi-century projections of ozone evolution to 2200 using emission-driven CMIP7 scenarios in the SOCOL-MPIOM chemistry-climate model. Our results show that despite the elimination of halogenated compounds, total column ozone exhibits non-monotonic evolution, with an initial increase of 8–12% by 2080–2100, followed by a decline to 2200, remaining 4.5–7% above the 2020 baseline. Stratospheric ozone at 50 hPa shows a monotonic decline of 2–11% by 2200 across all scenarios, with no recovery despite ongoing Montreal Protocol implementation. Critically, even in the high-overshoot scenario where CO2 concentrations decline from 830 to 350 ppm between 2100 and 2200, stratospheric ozone continues to decrease. Intensification of the Brewer-Dobson circulation in warmer climates reduces ozone residence time in the tropical stratosphere, decreasing photochemical production efficiency. This dynamic effect outweighs the reduction in ozone-depleting substances, leading to persistent stratospheric ozone depletion despite total column ozone enhancements in polar regions. Spatial analysis reveals pronounced regional differentiation: Antarctic regions show sustained total column enhancement of +18–26% by 2190–2200, while tropical regions decline to levels below baseline (−4 to −5%). Our results reveal fundamental asymmetry between climate forcing and ozone response, with characteristic adjustment timescales of 100–200 years, and have critical implications for long-term atmospheric protection policy.
Original languageEnglish
Article number92
JournalATMOSPHERE
Volume17
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 16 Jan 2026

    Research areas

  • chemistry-climate model, climate change, CMIP7 scenarios, irreversibility, ozone recovery, stratospheric cooling, stratospheric ozone, Atmospheric chemistry, Climate change, Climate models, Environmental protection, Halogenation, Long Term Evolution (LTE), Ozone, Recovery, Tropical engineering, Tropics, Upper atmosphere, Chemistry-climate models, CMIP7 scenario, Irreversibility, Long-term evolution, Monotonics, Ozone depleting substances, Ozone recovery, Stratospheric cooling, Stratospheric ozone, Total column ozone, Ozone layer, atmospheric chemistry, climate forcing, climate modeling, cooling, ozone depletion, photochemistry, stratosphere-troposphere interaction

ID: 147629900