I read through the referenceyou gave and there was no suggestion of a runaway 
ozone loss. there was an un quantified negative statement.

There was lots of discussion in this group about a year ago, particularly at 
the time of the publication of the Tilmes paper.

Not being an expert in this are a I rely a lot on Paul Crutzen's comment in his 
2006 paper; (he did after all get his Nobel prize for his work on the ozone 
layer!)

"Among possible negative side effects, those on stratospheric ozone first spring

to mind. Fortunately, in this case one can build on the experience with past 
volcanic

eruptions, such as El Chich´on in 1982 and Mount Pinatubo in 1991, which 
injected

3-5 Tg S (Hofmann and Solomon, 1989) and 10 Tg S (Bluth et al., 1992), 
respectively,

in the stratosphere. Local ozone destruction in the El Chich´on case was

about 16% at 20 km altitude at mid-latitudes (Hofmann and Solomon, 1989). For

Mount Pinatubo, global column ozone loss was about 2.5% (Kinnison et al., 1994).

For the climate engineering experiment, in which the cooling effect of all 
tropospheric

anthropogenic aerosol is removed, yielding a radiative heating of 1.4 W/m2

(Crutzen and Ramanathan, 2003), a stratospheric loading of almost 2 Tg S, and

an input of 1-2 Tg S/yr is required, depending on stratospheric residence times.

In this case, stratospheric sulfate injections would be 5 times less than after 
the

Mount Pinatubo eruption, leading to much smaller production of ozone-destroying

Cl and ClO radicals, whose formation depends on particle surface-catalyzed 
heterogeneous

reactions (Wilson, 1993). Compensating for a CO2 doubling would

lead to larger ozone loss but not as large as after Mount Pinatubo. Furthermore,

the amounts of stratospheric chlorine radicals, coming from past production of 
the

chloro-fluoro-carbon gases, are now declining by international regulation, so 
that

ozone will significantly recover by the middle of this century. 

ALBEDO ENHANCEMENT BY STRATOSPHERIC SULFUR

INJECTIONS: A CONTRIBUTION TO RESOLVE A POLICY in Climat Change 2006

----- Original Message ----- 

  From: John Nissen 
  To: geoengineering 
  Cc: Davies, John 
  Sent: Friday, January 09, 2009 5:39 PM
  Subject: [geo] Ozone depletion near catastrophe


  Hi all,

  John Davies has told me that after Pinatubo, we nearly had a runaway ozone 
depletion event.  The depletion is mentioned here:
  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_Pinatubo
  but does anybody have references to the near disaster?

  It is salutary to think that we have managed to avert one disaster, while we 
are now allowing another to happen before our eyes - with the Arctic sea ice 
disappearing and methane threatening to emerge from permafrost.  Did we not 
learn a lesson from before, just how fragile our existence is on this planet?

  John


  

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