Title: Convention of Ozone Depletion and the Montreal Protocol
1Convention of Ozone Depletion and the Montreal
Protocol
- Draft Year 1987
- Amendment Years 1990, 1992, 1995
- International
Stephanie Curtis Period 6
2Description/Environmental Issues Affected
- Signed by just 24 nations in 1987, subsequently
ratified by 191 governments - provided for gradual phasing-out of CFC (ozone
depleting substances) production and CFC
consumption by industrialized countries to 50
percent of their 1986 levels by 1998-99 (with a
ten-year grace period for developing nations) - Just six months later, scientists confirmed that
the Antarctic phenomenon was in fact caused by
CFCs, and momentum grew for a total phase-out of
ozone-depleting chemicals. The Protocol was
amended and substantially strengthened at
Conferences of the Parties in London (1990),
Copenhagen (1992), and Vienna (1995), and
continued to be modified in subsequent years.
-The number of controlled substances was
increased from the original eight to over eighty,
and by 1995 most had been eliminated by the
industrialized countries -Designed to protect
the stratospheric ozone layer -chlorofluorocarbons
(CFCs), halons, carbon tetrachloride, and methyl
chloroform--are to be phased out by 2000 (2005
for methyl chloroform)
3Agency/Group Responsible for Regulation and
Enforcement
- EPA developed and implemented
- The United Nations Environment Program organized
efforts in 1982 to negotiate an international
agreement.