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Antarctic Ozone Hole Closes Early, Smallest in Five Years, Copernicus Says

Experts tie the improvement to decades of curbs on ozone‑depleting chemicals under the Montreal Protocol.

Overview

  • Copernicus confirmed the Antarctic ozone hole fully closed on December 1, 2025, the earliest closure since 2019.
  • For a second straight year the hole was relatively small, breaking a run of unusually large, long‑lived holes from 2020 to 2023.
  • The hole spanned roughly 15–20 million square kilometers in September and October, then shrank rapidly in November before vanishing.
  • Indicators pointed to higher ozone in the Antarctic stratosphere this season, including a smaller ozone mass deficit and a higher average minimum.
  • Scientists are investigating recent variability, exploring roles for the 2022 Hunga Tonga eruption and stratospheric temperature changes linked to climate change.