Not at all. Carbon dioxide is a gas that plants use to sustain life. The ozone layer thins each winter over the poles due to a lack of sunlight reaching that area during the long winter nights. Once the sun returns, the thinning area quickly disappears.
Yes it does. It causes global warming which then causes ozone depletion.
They cause holes in ozone layer. It is due to their reactive nature.
Carbon's do not directly cause a hole. They form greenhouse gases as carbon dioxide. This then causes ozone depletion.
Carbon emissions release greenhouse gases. These gases cause ozone depletion.
Carbon dioxide leads to greenhouse effect. This could lead to ozone depletion and ozone hole.
It doesn't. CFCs in spray cans do.
Yes, chlorofluorocarbons have an adverse effect on the ozone layer. These react with ozone and decompose it to deplete the ozone layer.
Chlorofluorocarbons damage the protective ozone layer.
(CFC) Chlorofluorocarbons
The main cause of thinning of ozone layer is the wreckless use of CFC's that is chlorofluorocarbons. These are complex compounds which react with ozone to deplete it.
Water vapor, chlorofluorocarbons, and bromofluorocarbons.
See "What is causing the depletion of the Ozone Layer?" in the"Related questions" section below.
Yes, chlorofluorocarbons have an adverse effect on the ozone layer. These react with ozone and decompose it to deplete the ozone layer.
Chlorofluorocarbons damage the protective ozone layer.
Holes in ozone layer are the thinning of ozone layer. They cause loss of life of flora and fauna.
Chlorofluorocarbons
(CFC) Chlorofluorocarbons
The main cause of thinning of ozone layer is the wreckless use of CFC's that is chlorofluorocarbons. These are complex compounds which react with ozone to deplete it.
Water vapor, chlorofluorocarbons, and bromofluorocarbons.
They are depleting the ozone layer. they react with ozone and deplete it.
CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons) destroy ozone in the ozone layer.
Ozone depletion is the process where ozone holes are created in the ozone layer. It is caused due to the action of chloro-floro-carbons on the ozone molecule to break it down to oxygen.
Manmade chemicals like chlorofluorocarbons and bromofluorocarbons are the major depleters of the ozone layer. The chlorine and bromine separate from the CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons) and destroy the ozone molecules.