03545oas 2200709 450 991070975330332120180628150457.0(CKB)5470000002472713(OCoLC)881108530(OCoLC)995470000002472713(EXLCZ)99547000000247271320140606a19919999 ua engurcn||||auuuutxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierScientific assessment of ozone depletionWashington, DC :National Aeronautics and Space Administration :National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration ;London, United Kingdom :United Kingdom Department of the Environment ;Nairobi, Kenya :United Nations Environment Program ;Geneva, Switzerland :World Meteorological Organization,1991-1 online resource (volumes) illustrations, mapsReport / World Meteorological Organization, Global Ozone Research and Monitoring Project"An international agreement known as the Montreal Protocol on Substances That Deplete the Ozone Layer was reached in 1987. Through that agreement and its subsequent amendments and adjustments, many nations of the world have carried out policies to reduce and then phase out their use of ozone-depleting chemicals. The Montreal Protocol also called for the international scientific community to periodically update governments on the latest scientific findings related to the ozone layer. Conducted under the auspices of the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) and the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and co-sponsored by NASA, NOAA, and the European Commission, these periodic "state-of-the-science" assessments have guided policymakers as they strengthened the original provisions of the Montreal Protocol. Together with colleagues at NASA, other NOAA laboratories, and other scientific institutions across the U.S. and around the world, CSD (formerly the Aeronomy Laboratory) has played a leading role in preparing these assessments"--Publisher website.Includes bibliographical references.Ozone layerOzone layer depletionAtmospheric ozoneAtmospheric chemistryGlobal warmingAtmospheric chemistryfastAtmospheric ozonefastGlobal warmingfastOzone layerfastOzone layer depletionfastOzone layer.Ozone layer depletion.Atmospheric ozone.Atmospheric chemistry.Global warming.Atmospheric chemistry.Atmospheric ozone.Global warming.Ozone layer.Ozone layer depletion.United States.National Aeronautics and Space Administration,United States.National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,Great Britain.Department of the Environment,United Nations Environment Programme,World Meteorological Organization,European Commission,VVCVVCVVCOCLCFOCLCAOCLCQOCLCOOCLCAGPOJOURNAL9910709753303321Scientific assessment of ozone depletion3315918UNINA