History
- Also called:
- acid precipitation or acid deposition
- Related Topics:
- air pollution
- nitrogen dioxide
- sulfur dioxide
- nitrogen oxide
Modern anthropogenic acid deposition began in Europe and eastern North America after World War II, as countries in those areas greatly increased their consumption of fossil fuels. International cooperation to address air pollution and acid deposition began with the 1972 United Nations Conference on the Human Environment in Stockholm, Sweden. In 1979 the Geneva Convention on Long-range Transboundary Air Pollution created the framework for reducing air pollution and acid deposition in Europe. The convention produced the first legally binding international agreement to reduce air pollution on a broad regional basis. This first agreement has been extended by several protocols since its original inception.
In the United States, reductions in acid deposition stem from the Clean Air Act of 1970 and its amendments in 1990. Work toward developing a Memorandum of Intent between the U.S. and Canada to reduce air pollution and acid deposition began in the 1970s. However, it was not formalized until the Canada–United States Air Quality Agreement in 1991, which placed permanent caps on SO2 emissions and guided the reduction of NOx emissions in both countries. The SO2 emissions in the United States and Canada peaked in the late 1970s, but they have subsequently declined as a result of the adoption of government-mandated air pollution standards. The first phase of emission reductions ordered by the U.S. Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990 was begun in 1995, mainly by the regulation of coal-fired power plant emissions. This development marked the beginning of further significant SO2 reductions in the United States and resulted in an 88 percent decline in SO2 emissions between 1990 and 2017.
In contrast, NOx emissions in the United States peaked about 1980 and remained relatively stable until the end of the 1990s, when emissions began to decline more substantially because of controls on emissions from power plants and vehicles. NOx emissions have exceeded SO2 emissions since about 1980, but they too have fallen with the implementation of the Clean Air Act. NO2 emissions, for example, declined by 50 percent between 1990 and 2017. The combined reductions of SO2 and NOx emissions during this period led to a significant drop in acid deposition, as well as sulfate (SO42) and nitrate (NO3) deposition. Ammonia (NH3) and ammonium deposition continue to increase in some parts of the United States, especially in areas with intensive agriculture and livestock production.
As a result of actions and agreements such as those described above, acid deposition in both Europe and eastern North America has been significantly reduced. The longest continuous record of precipitation chemistry in North America is from the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest in New Hampshire, U.S., where H+ concentration in precipitation declined by about 86 percent from the mid-1960s through 2016. Similar trends were also reflected in data collected at measuring stations located across the eastern United States, which reported a decrease of approximately 40 percent in H+ concentration between 1994 and 2008. EPA monitoring sites in largely urban areas have shown that annual average SO2 and nitrogen concentrations present in both wet and dry acid deposition decreased dramatically across the eastern United States between 1989 and 2015, and the greatest declines occurred in the area of dry sulfur deposition, which fell by roughly 82 percent (when regional figures for the Mid-Atlantic, Midwest, Northeast, and Southeast were considered).
Despite significant reductions in acid deposition, some European and North American ecosystems impaired by acid deposition have been slow to recover. Decades of acid deposition in these sensitive regions have depleted the acid-neutralizing capacity of soils. As a result, these soils are even more susceptible to continued acid deposition, even at reduced levels. Further reductions in NOx and SO2 emissions will be necessary to protect such acid-sensitive ecosystems.
In contrast to Europe and North America, acid deposition is increasing in other parts of the world. For example, Asia has seen a steady increase in emissions of SO2 and NOx as well as NH3—a phenomenon most apparent in parts of China and India, where coal burning for industrial and electricity production has greatly expanded since about 2000. However, the introduction of stringent emission controls in China in 2007 produced a 75 percent decline in the country’s SO2 emissions by 2019, whereas India’s SO2 emissions continued to increase.
Gene E. Likens Thomas J. Butler