NEW YORK: The West Asia's first centre
to monitor the health of Ozone layer, which protects the environment from the
harmful ultraviolet rays coming from the sun, is to come up in
Qatar.
The high-tech centre to be set up under a UN backed project
will fill the ground and satellite-data gaps in West Asia to help monitor the
Ozone layer which actually recovering after decades of depletion due to
environment abuse by the human being.
Under the UN Environment
Programme, over 90% of Ozone damaging gases have already been phased out and it
is predicted that the layer might fully recover around the year
2060.
But without direct scientific observations worldwide,
governments cannot know whether improvements are genuinely taking place or
whether there is a need to step up or re-focus the response, UNEP Executive
Director Achim Steiner said.
"Big data gaps exist for a range of key
issues, from climate and ozone to particles and aerosols in the air and
atmosphere, in several regions. These include Siberia and large parts of Africa,
including the Congo River Basin," said Steiner.
The Qatar station
will help in finding data relating to West Asia and the Gulf to benefit the
region and the world, he added.