Acid Rain
Acid Rain:
Acid Rain, form of air pollution in which airborne acids produced by electric utility plants and other sources fall to Earth in distant regions. The corrosive nature of acid rain causes widespread damage to the environment. The problem begins with the production of sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides from the burning of fossil fuels, such as coal, natural gas, and oil, and from certain kinds of manufacturing. Sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides react with water and other chemicals in the air to form sulfuric acid, nitric acid, and other pollutants. These acid pollutants reach high into the atmosphere, travel with the wind for hundreds of miles, and eventually return to the ground by way of rain, snow, or fog, and as invisible “dry” forms.
Damage from acid rain has been widespread in eastern North America and throughout Europe, and in Japan, China, and Southeast Asia. Acid rain leaches nutrients from soils, slows the growth of trees, and makes lakes uninhabitable for fish and other wildlife. In cities, acid pollutants corrode almost everything they touch, accelerating natural wear and tear on structures such as buildings and statues. Acids combine with other chemicals to form urban smog, which attacks the lungs, causing illness and premature deaths.
Formation:
The process that leads to acid rain begins with the burning of fossil fuels. Burning, or combustion, is a chemical reaction in which oxygen from the air combines with carbon, nitrogen, sulfur, and other elements in the substance being burned. The new compounds formed are gases called oxides. When sulfur and nitrogen are present in the fuel, their reaction with oxygen yields sulfur dioxide and various nitrogen oxide compounds. In the United States, 70 percent of sulfur dioxide pollution comes from power plants, especially those that burn coal. In Canada, industrial activities, including oil refining and metal smelting, account for 61 percent of sulfur dioxide pollution. Nitrogen oxides enter the atmosphere from many sources, with motor vehicles emitting the largest share—43 percent in the United States and 60 percent in Canada.
Once in the atmosphere, sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides undergo complex reactions with water vapor and other chemicals to yield sulfuric acid, nitric acid, and other pollutants called nitrates and sulfates. The acid compounds are carried by air currents and the wind, sometimes over long distances. When clouds or fog form in acid-laden air, they too are acidic, and so is the rain or snow that falls from them.
Acid pollutants also occur as dry particles and as gases, which may reach the ground without the help of water. When these “dry” acids are washed from ground surfaces by rain, they add to the acids in the rain itself to produce a still more corrosive solution. The combination of acid rain and dry acids is known as acid deposition.
Effects:
The acids in acid rain react chemically with any object they contact. Acids are corrosive chemicals that react with other chemicals by giving up hydrogen atoms. The acidity of a substance comes from the abundance of free hydrogen atoms when the substance is dissolved in water. Acidity is measured using a pH scale with units from 0 to 14. Acidic substances have pH numbers from 1 to 6—the lower the pH number, the stronger, or more corrosive, the substance. Some nonacidic substances, called bases or alkalis, are like acids in reverse—they readily accept the hydrogen atoms that the acids offer. Bases have pH numbers from 8 to 14, with the higher values indicating increased alkalinity. Pure water has a neutral pH of 7—it is not acidic or basic. Rain, snow, or fog with a pH below 5.6 is considered acid rain.
When bases mix with acids, the bases lessen the strength of an acid (see Acids and Bases). This buffering action regularly occurs in nature. Rain, snow, and fog formed in regions free of acid pollutants are slightly acidic, having a pH near 5.6. Alkaline chemicals in the environment, found in rocks, soils, lakes, and streams, regularly neutralize this precipitation. But when precipitation is highly acidic, with a pH below 5.6, naturally occurring acid buffers become depleted over time, and nature’s ability to neutralize the acids is impaired. Acid rain has been linked to widespread environmental damage, including soil and plant degradation, depleted life in lakes and streams, and erosion of human-made structures.
A. Soil:- In
soil, acid rain dissolves and washes away nutrients needed by plants. It can
also dissolve toxic substances, such as aluminum and mercury, which are
naturally present in some soils, freeing these toxins to pollute water or to
poison plants that absorb them. Some soils are quite alkaline and can
neutralize acid deposition indefinitely; others, especially thin mountain soils
derived from granite or gneiss, buffer acid only briefly.
B.
Trees:- By removing useful nutrients
from the soil, acid rain slows the growth of plants, especially trees. It also
attacks trees more directly by eating holes in the waxy coating of leaves and
needles, causing brown dead spots. If many such spots form, a tree loses some
of its ability to make food through photosynthesis. Also, organisms that cause
disease can infect the tree through its injured leaves. Once weakened, trees
are more vulnerable to other stresses, such as insect infestations, drought,
and cold temperatures. Spruce and fir forests at higher elevations, where the trees literally touch the acid clouds, seem to be most at risk. Acid rain has been blamed for the decline of spruce forests on the highest ridges of the Appalachian Mountains in the eastern United States. In the Black Forest of southwestern Germany, half of the trees are damaged from acid rain and other forms of pollution.
C. Agriculture:- Most
farm crops are less affected by acid rain than are forests. The deep soils of
many farm regions, such as those in the Midwestern United States, can absorb
and neutralize large amounts of acid. Mountain farms are more at risk—the thin
soils in these higher elevations cannot neutralize so much acid. Farmers can
prevent acid rain damage by monitoring the condition of the soil and, when
necessary, adding crushed limestone to the soil to neutralize acid. If
excessive amounts of nutrients have been leached out of the soil, farmers can
replace them by adding nutrient-rich fertilizer.
D.
Surface water:- Acid rain falls into and drains into
streams, lakes, and marshes. Where there is snow cover in winter, local waters
grow suddenly more acidic when the snow melts in the spring. Most natural
waters are close to chemically neutral, neither acidic nor alkaline: their pH
is between 6 and 8. In the northeastern United States and southeastern Canada,
the water in some lakes now has a pH value of less than 5 as a result of acid
rain. This means they are at least ten times more acidic than they should be.
In the Adirondack Mountains of New York State, a quarter of the lakes and ponds
are acidic, and many have lost their brook trout and other fish. In the middle
Appalachian Mountains, over 1,300 streams are afflicted. All of Norway’s major
rivers have been damaged by acid rain, severely reducing salmon and trout
populations.
Acid rain falls into and drains into
streams, lakes, and marshes. Where there is snow cover in winter, local waters
grow suddenly more acidic when the snow melts in the spring. Most natural waters
are close to chemically neutral, neither acidic nor alkaline: their pH is
between 6 and 8. In the northeastern United States and southeastern Canada, the
water in some lakes now has a pH value of less than 5 as a result of acid rain.
This means they are at least ten times more acidic than they should be. In the
Adirondack Mountains of New York State, a quarter of the lakes and ponds are
acidic, and many have lost their brook trout and other fish. In the middle
Appalachian Mountains, over 1,300 streams are afflicted. All of Norway’s major
rivers have been damaged by acid rain, severely reducing salmon and trout
populations.
E.
Plants and Animals:- The effects of acid rain on
wildlife can be far-reaching. If a population of one plant or animal is
adversely affected by acid rain, animals that feed on that organism may also
suffer. Ultimately, an entire ecosystem may become endangered. Some species
that live in water are very sensitive to acidity, some less so. Freshwater
clams and mayfly young, for instance, begin dying when the water pH reaches
6.0. Frogs can generally survive more acidic water, but if their supply of
mayflies is destroyed by acid rain, frog populations may also decline. Fish
eggs of most species stop hatching at a pH of 5.0. Below a pH of 4.5, water is
nearly sterile, unable to support any wildlife.
Land animals dependent on aquatic
organisms are also affected. Scientists have found that populations of snails
living in or near water polluted by acid rain are declining in some regions. In
The Netherlands songbirds are finding fewer snails to eat. The eggs these birds
lay have weakened shells because the birds are receiving less calcium from
snail shells.
F.
Human Health:- The acidification of surface waters
causes little direct harm to people. It is safe to swim in even the most
acidified lakes. However, toxic substances leached from soil can pollute local
water supplies. In Sweden, as many as 10,000 lakes have been polluted by
mercury released from soils damaged by acid rain, and residents have been
warned to avoid eating fish caught in these lakes. In the air, acids join with
other chemicals to produce urban smog, which can irritate the lungs and make
breathing difficult, especially for people who already have asthma, bronchitis,
or other respiratory diseases. Solid particles of sulfates, a class of minerals
derived from sulfur dioxide, are thought to be especially damaging to the
lungs.
Effort to Control
A.
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National Legislation
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In the United States, legislative
efforts to control sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides began with passage of the
Clean Air Act of 1970. This act established emissions standards for pollutants
from automobiles and industry. In 1990 Congress approved a set of amendments to
the act that impose stricter limits on pollution emissions, particularly
pollutants that cause acid rain. These amendments aim to cut the national
output of sulfur dioxide from 23.5 million tons to 16 million tons by the year
2010. Although no national target is set for nitrogen oxides, the amendments
require that power plants, which emit about one-third of all nitrogen oxides
released to the atmosphere, reduce their emissions from 7.5 million tons to 5
million tons by 2010. These rules were applied first to selected large power
plants in Eastern and Midwestern states. In the year 2000, smaller, cleaner
power plants across the country came under the law.
These 1990 amendments include a
novel provision for sulfur dioxide control. Each year the government gives
companies permits to release a specified number of tons of sulfur dioxide.
Polluters are allowed to buy and sell their emissions permits. For instance, a
company can choose to reduce its sulfur dioxide emissions more than the law
requires and sell its unused pollution emission allowance to another company
that is further from meeting emission goals; the buyer may then pollute above
the limit for a certain time. Unused pollution rights can also be 'banked' and
kept for later use. It is hoped that this flexible market system will clean up
emissions more quickly and cheaply than a set of rigid rules.
Legislation enacted in Canada
restricts the annual amount of sulfur dioxide emissions to 2.3 million tons in
all of Canada’s seven easternmost provinces, where acid rain causes the most
damage. A national cap for sulfur dioxide emissions has been set at 3.2 million
tons per year. Legislation is currently being developed to enforce stricter
pollution emissions by 2010.
Norwegian law sets the goal of
reducing sulfur dioxide emission to 76 percent of 1980 levels and nitrogen
oxides emissions to 70 percent of the 1986 levels. To encourage cleanup, Norway
collects a hefty tax from industries that emit acid pollutants. In some cases
these taxes make it more expensive to emit acid pollutants than to reduce
emissions.
B.
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International Agreements
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Acid rain typically crosses national
borders, making pollution control an international issue. Canada receives much
of its acid pollution from the United States—by some estimates as much as 50
percent. Norway and Sweden receive acid pollutants from Britain, Germany,
Poland, and Russia. The majority of acid pollution in Japan comes from China.
Debates about responsibilities and cleanup costs for acid pollutants led to
international cooperation. In 1988, as part of the Long-Range Transboundary Air
Pollution Agreement sponsored by the United Nations, the United States and 24
other nations ratified a protocol promising to hold yearly nitrogen oxide
emissions at or below 1987 levels. In 1991 the United States and Canada signed
an Air Quality Agreement setting national limits on annual sulfur dioxide
emissions from power plants and factories. In 1994 in Oslo, Norway, 12 European
nations agreed to reduce sulfur dioxide emissions by as much as 87 percent by
2010.
Legislative actions to prevent acid
rain have results. The targets established in laws and treaties are being met,
usually ahead of schedule. Sulfur emissions in Europe decreased by 40 percent
from 1980 to 1994. In Norway sulfur dioxide emissions fell by 75 percent during
the same period. Since 1980 annual sulfur dioxide emissions in the United
States have dropped from 26 million tons to 18.3 million tons. Canada reports
sulfur dioxide emissions have been reduced to 2.6 million tons, 18 percent
below the proposed limit of 3.2 million tons.
Monitoring stations in several
nations report that precipitation is actually becoming less acidic. In Europe,
lakes and streams are now growing less acid. However, this does not seem to be
the case in the United States and Canada. The reasons are not completely
understood, but apparently, controls reducing nitrogen oxide emissions only
began recently and their effects have yet to make a mark. In addition, soils in
some areas have absorbed so much acid that they contain no more neutralizing
alkaline chemicals. The weathering of rock will gradually replace the missing
alkaline chemicals, but scientists fear that improvement will be very slow
unless pollution controls are made even stricter.
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