{"id": 96655, "name": "Excess skin cancer cases per million (Copenhagen Amendments)", "unit": "excess skin cancer cases per million", "description": "", "createdAt": "2018-04-06T15:26:02.000Z", "updatedAt": "2023-06-15T05:05:42.000Z", "coverage": "", "timespan": "", "datasetId": 2733, "columnOrder": 0, "dataPath": "https://api.ourworldindata.org/v1/indicators/96655.data.json", "metadataPath": "https://api.ourworldindata.org/v1/indicators/96655.metadata.json", "datasetName": "Ozone depletion impacts on skin cancer incidence (Slaper et al., 1996)", "type": "int", "nonRedistributable": false, "display": {}, "source": {"id": 15466, "name": "Ozone depletion impacts on skin cancer incidence - Slaper et al.", "dataPublishedBy": "Slaper, H. et al. Estimates of ozone depletion and skin cancer incidence to examine the Vienna Convention achievements. Nature 384(6606): 256\u2013258 (1996).", "dataPublisherSource": "", "link": "https://www.nature.com/articles/384256a0.pdf", "retrievedDate": "6th April 2018", "additionalInfo": "The authors modelled the number of excess skin cancer cases they would expect among fair-skinned populations in the United States and Northwest Europe as a result of stratospheric ozone depletion.\n\nThis was modelled for a scenario of no restrictions on ozone-depleting substances, where the authors assumed a 3% annual increase in emissions of chloroflourocarbons (CFCs), halons and methyl chloroforms. \n\nThe Montreal Protocol scenario assumed a decline of five important ozone-depleting substances by 50% by the end of 1999 as agreed in the protocol in 1987.\n\nThe Copenhagen Amendment assumed the production of 21 ozone-depleting substances reduced to zero by the end of 1995."}, "dimensions": {"years": {"values": [{"id": 2000}, {"id": 2030}, {"id": 2050}, {"id": 2070}, {"id": 2100}]}, "entities": {"values": [{"id": 13, "name": "United States", "code": "USA"}, {"id": 37483, "name": "Northwest Europe", "code": null}]}}}