How Acid Rain Works
If you hike through the Appalachian Mountains, you'll spot stands of dead and weakened trees. If you live in a city, you might notice worn stone buildings, streaks on your car roof or corroded metal railings and statues. You can see the effects of acid rain nearly everywhere you go, but with media and public attention turned to the more ominous prospect of global warming, acid rain has fallen by the wayside. The scourge from the sky almost seems like a 20th-century problem -- an issue dealt with in the 1980s and 1990s by legislation.
Emissions of sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides react with
water vapor in the atmosphere to create sulfuric and nitric acids.
Acid rain occurs mostly in the Northern Hemisphere -- the more industrialized, dirtier half of the globe. Winds can sweep up emissions from high smokestacks and carry pollutants far from their original sources, crossing state lines and national borders in the process. Acid rain may not have the complete global range of greenhouse gases, but it is a transboundary, and therefore international, issue.
Acid rain, also known as acid deposition, is caused by emissions of sulfur dioxide (SO2) and nitrogen oxides (NOx) from power plants, cars and factories. Natural sources like volcanoes, forest fires and lightning strikes also add to the man-made pollution. SO2 and NOx become acids when they enter the atmosphere and react with water vapor. The resulting sulfuric and nitric acids can fall as wet or dry depositions. Wet deposition is precipitation: acid rain, snow, sleet or fog. Dry deposition falls as acidic particulates or gases.
The pH of Acid Rain
Scientists express the acidity of acid rain using the pH scale. The scale defines a solution's acidity, neutrality or alkalinity based on its concentration of hydrogen ions. Acids have a high concentration of hydrogen ions and a low pH. The scale ranges from zero to 14, with pure water at a neutral 7.0. Most water, however, is not exactly pure. Even clean, normal rain has a pH of about 5.6. This is because it reacts with carbon dioxide in the atmosphere and forms mildly acidic carbonic acid before it becomes rain.
The pH scale is a measure of acidity and alkalinity.
Acid rain has a pH of 5.0 or less.
Acid rain has a pH of 5.0 or less. Most acid deposition ranges from pH 4.3 to 5.0 -- somewhere between the acidity of orange juice and black coffee. But comparing acid rain to safe, natural acids can be misleading. Even at its weakest, acid rain wrecks ecosystems by stunting sensitive plants and killing delicate aquatic eggs.
Programs that monitor acid rain analyze hydrogen content to determine pH. They also measure atmospheric concentrations of nitric acid, nitrate, sulfur dioxide, sulfate and ammonium. In the United States, the National Atmospheric Deposition Program (NADP) supervises wet deposition while the Clean Air Status and Trends Network (CASTNET) observes dry deposition. Monitoring acid deposition helps determine critical loads, or the amount of pollutants an ecosystem can support before damage. Accurate critical loads help set effective targets for SO2 and NOx reductions.
Now we'll learn about the harmful effects of acid rain on aquatic environments, forests, finishes, building materials and human health.
Surface Waters
Surface waters and their fragile ecosystems are perhaps the most famous victims of acid rain. Most of the precipitation that enters a lake, river, stream or marsh must first pass over and seep through soil. All soil has a buffering capacity, or ability to resist changes in acidity and alkalinity. The soil's buffering capacity determines a water body's acidity. If the capacity is low, or has reached its limit, acid rain can pass through un-neutralized.
Acid deposition weakens trees and pollutes surface waters.
Most life is comfortable at a near-neutral pH -- stray too far from pH 7.0, and delicate organisms begin to die. Plankton and invertebrates are sensitive to changes in acidity and die first. At pH 5.0, fish eggs degrade and young cannot develop. Adult fish and frogs can sometimes tolerate acidities as low as pH 4.0, but they starve as their weaker food sources die out. When acid rain disrupts the food chain, biodiversity decreases.
Nitrogen deposition from acid rain also damages coastal waters and estuaries. Nitrogen-rich water supports massive algae growth and algal blooms. Bacteria decompose the dead algae, flourish themselves and soak up the water's available oxygen. Fish, shellfish, sea grass beds and coral reefs die in the algae-choked, oxygen-depleted waters. Scientists estimate that 10 percent to 45 percent of human-produced nitrogen that winds up in coastal waters comes from atmospheric deposition [Source: Environmental Protection Agency].
Most acidic bodies of water do not look polluted. As decaying organic matter settles, acidified water can appear clear and blue. Some species, like rushes and moss, even thrive in acidic conditions. But the greenery and clear waters belie an unwholesome environment. Diversity drops, and species left without predators often grow disturbingly large.
Acid rain also damages forests.
The Effects of Acid Rain
Forests rely on their soil's buffering capacity to protect them from acid
rain. Acidic waters draw out soil toxins like aluminum. Trees take in the
poisonous substances, and runoff dumps it in lakes, rivers and streams. Acid
rain also dissolves helpful minerals and nutrients like calcium, magnesium and
potassium before trees can absorb them. Acid rain rarely kills a forest outright
but instead stunts its growth through years of soil degradation. Nutrient
deprivation and exposure to toxins make trees more likely to topple in storms or
die in cold weather.
Even trees in well-buffered soil can weaken in harsh acid fog. High-elevation
forests soak in acidic clouds, which strip leaves of nutrients and break down
trees' ability to resist cold. The bald peaks of the Appalachian Mountains tell
of the poisonous effect of acid rain on high-elevation forests.
Photographer: Michael Drager | Agency: Dreamstime.com Acid rain can eat through stone and metal. It has
accelerated the natural weathering process of this scarred stone
angel's face.
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Materials and Finishes
Acid rain has the unsettling
ability to erase and obliterate stone and metal, the most durable of materials.
Old buildings, monuments and tombstones bear the smooth signs of acidic
corrosion and deterioration. Acid deposition speeds up natural weathering caused
by rain, sun, snow and wind.
Acid rain also mars automotive paint. The auto industry considers acid
deposition one type of corrosive environmental fallout, along
with tree sap, pollen and bird droppings. Acid markings leave irregular, etched
shapes on horizontal surfaces. Repainting is the only way to fix a car finish
disfigured by acid rain.
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Acid
Rain and the Taj MahalDamage from acid rain mars some of the
world’s finest cultural monuments. Emissions reductions, however, have
helped slow the rate of damage in North America and Europe. India’s Taj
Mahal has not fared as well. The mausoleum built by the Mughal Emperor
Shah Jahan for his beloved wife Mumtaz Mahal is losing its white luster
and turning a sickly pale shade. Scientists blame pollution from local
foundries and a nearby oil refinery.
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Health
Since acid rain can kill aquatic animals, weaken
trees and dissolve stone, it seems like it could also scald or burn humans. But
it doesn't affect people in the same way as it does fish or plants. Acid rain
feels the same as regular rain -- it's even safe to swim in an acidic lake. But
the sulfate and nitrate particulates of dry deposition can cause asthma,
bronchitis and heart problems. The NOx in acid deposition
also reacts with volatile organic compounds (VOCs) to form
ground-level ozone.
Ozone, or smog, aggravates and weakens the respiratory
system.
Reducing Acid Rain
Acid rain has existed since the first factories of the Industrial Revolution
began spitting out toxic emissions. An English scientist, Robert Angus Smith,
coined the term "acid rain" in 1872 when he wrote of its corroding touch on
buildings and deadly effect on plants. But acid rain did not become a
government-monitored environmental problem until more than a century later.
Scientists had by then determined that acid rain was a transboundary rather than
a local concern. In 1980, the Acid Deposition Act launched a 10-year study on
acid rain under the direction of the National Acidic Precipitation
Assessment Program (NAPAP) to monitor sites around the country.
In 1990, armed with the NAPAP's study, Congress changed the existing Clean
Air Act to include acid rain. The new Title IV amendment of the Clean Air Act
called for SO2 and NOx reductions. The
Acid Rain Program (ARP) was formed in 1995 to bring Title IV
into effect.
Photographer: Czbrat | Agency:
Dreamstime.com Power plants must limit emissions of SO2 and NOx to meet targets set by
the Acid Rain Program.
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The
ARP places limits on the power industry to reduce annual emissions of SO2 and NOx. The ARP uses a cap and
trade program to cut SO2 emissions. It sets a cap
on the total amount of SO2 that power plants in the
contiguous United States can produce. After setting a cap, the ARP distributes
allowances to power plant units. Units are only allowed to produce as much
SO2 as they have credit for. If they reduce emissions
faster than the ARP requires, they can bank allowances for future use or sell
them to other plants. The final 2010 cap will be 8.95 million tons allowed per
year, a remarkable 50 percent less than power plant emissions from 1980
The ARP regulates NOx reductions with a more
conventional rate-based regulatory system. The program sets a
limit on allowable pounds of NOx per million British
thermal units (lb/mmBtu) for every power plant's boiler. Owners either meet
target reductions for individual boilers or average the emissions of all units
owned and meet a combined target. The ARP aims to reduce NOx to 2 million tons below the projected 2000 level had Title IV
not existed
Power plants meet their ARP targets by using low sulfur coal, "wet scrubbers"
or flue gas desulphurization systems, low NOx burners and
other clean coal
technologies. They can also trade SO2 credits amongst
themselves.
Even with an increased energy demand, the ARP has successfully reduced
emissions of SO2 and NOx. But NAPAP
suggests that for ecosystems to fully recover, reductions will have to drop an
additional 40 percent to 80 percent below the full-force limits of 2010
Cars also emit NOx. Newer designs of catalytic
converters help treat exhaust and remove NOx and other
pollutants like carbon monoxide and the VOCs that contribute to smog.
Even with remarkable clean coal technologies, catalytic converters and strong
caps and regulations, fossil fuels are still a dirty power source. Alternative
forms of energy like nuclear, solar
and hydropower
do not emit the millions of tons of SO2 and NOx that upend ecosystems, blight buildings and monuments and
weaken people's health.
To learn more about acid rain, alternative forms of energy and other
related topics