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Following the discovery of the Antarctic ozone hole in late 1985, governments
recognized the need for stronger measures to reduce the production and consumption
of a number of CFCs (CFC 11, 12, 113, 114, and 115) and several Halons (1211,
1301, 2402). The Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer
was adopted on 16 September 1987 at the Headquarters of the International Civil
Aviation Organization in Montreal. The Protocol came into force on 1st January
1989, when it was ratified by 29 countries and the EEC. Since then several other
countries have ratified it.
The Protocol was designed so that the phase out schedules could be revised
on the basis of periodic scientific and technological assessments. Following
such assessments, the Protocol was adjusted to accelerate the phase out schedules.
It has also been amended to introduce other kinds of control measures and to
add new controlled substances to the list.
View the full text of the Montreal
Protocol (pdf)

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