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Figure 1: Projected contribution of "greenhouse gases" to global climatic warming by the year 2030. Note the substantial role of CFCs. Figure 2: Even a CFC cutback as high as 85 percent, which was agreed to by the Montreal Protocol, will not be enough to stop ozone destruction. The graph shows that such a cut would have a stabilising effect – but in fact by keeping CFC omissions at today's levels, ozone continues to be destroyed faster than it is created.

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Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/FORBI19880801.2.9.3

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Forest and Bird, Volume 19, Issue 3, 1 August 1988, Page 5

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80

Figure 1: Projected contribution of "greenhouse gases" to global climatic warming by the year 2030. Note the substantial role of CFCs. Figure 2: Even a CFC cutback as high as 85 percent, which was agreed to by the Montreal Protocol, will not be enough to stop ozone destruction. The graph shows that such a cut would have a stabilising effect – but in fact by keeping CFC omissions at today's levels, ozone continues to be destroyed faster than it is created. Forest and Bird, Volume 19, Issue 3, 1 August 1988, Page 5

Figure 1: Projected contribution of "greenhouse gases" to global climatic warming by the year 2030. Note the substantial role of CFCs. Figure 2: Even a CFC cutback as high as 85 percent, which was agreed to by the Montreal Protocol, will not be enough to stop ozone destruction. The graph shows that such a cut would have a stabilising effect – but in fact by keeping CFC omissions at today's levels, ozone continues to be destroyed faster than it is created. Forest and Bird, Volume 19, Issue 3, 1 August 1988, Page 5

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