What is Acid Rain?
Acid rain is a result of air
pollution. When any type of fuel is burnt, lots of different chemicals are
produced. The smoke that comes from a fire or the fumes that come out of a car
exhaust don't just contain the sooty grey particles that you can see - they also
contains lots of invisible gases that can be even more harmful to our
environment.
Power stations, factories and
cars all burn fuels and therefore they all produce polluting gases. Some of
these gases (especially nitrogen oxides and sulphur dioxide) react with the tiny
droplets of water in clouds to form sulphuric and nitric acids. The rain from
these clouds then falls as very weak acid - which is why it is known as "acid
rain".
How acidic is acid rain?
Acidity is measured using a
scale called the pH scale. This scale goes from 0 to 14. 0 is the most acidic
and 14 is the most alkaline (opposite of acidic). Something with a pH value of
7, we call neutral, this means that it is neither acidic nor alkaline.
Very strong acids will burn if
they touch your skin and can even destroy metals. Acid rain is much, much weaker
than this, never acidic enough to burn your skin.
Rain is always slightly acidic
because it mixes with naturally occurring oxides in the air. Unpolluted rain
would have a pH value of between 5 and 6. When the air becomes more polluted
with nitrogen oxides and sulphur dioxide the acidity can increase to a pH value
of 4. Some rain has even been recorded as being pH2.
Vinegar has a pH value of 2.2
and lemon juice has a value of pH2.3. Even the strongest recorded acid rain is
only about as acidic as lemon juice or vinegar and we know that these don't harm
us - so why do we worry about acid rain?
The Effects of Acid Rain
Acid rain can be carried great
distances in the atmosphere, not just between countries but also from continent
to continent. The acid can also take the form of snow, mists and dry dusts. The
rain sometimes falls many miles from the source of pollution but wherever it
falls it can have a serious effect on soil, trees, buildings and water.
Forests all over the world are
dying, fish are dying. In Scandinavia there are dead lakes, which are crystal
clear and contain no living creatures or plant life. Many of Britain's
freshwater fish are threatened, there have been reports of deformed fish being
hatched. This leads to fish-eating birds and animals being affected also. Is
acid rain responsible for all this? Scientists have been doing a lot of research
into how acid rain affects the environment.
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Forests
It is thought that acid rain can cause trees to grow more
slowly or even to die but scientists have found that it is not the only cause.
The same amount of acid rain seems to have more effect in some areas than it
does in others.
As acid rain falls on a forest it trickles through
the leaves of the trees and runs down into the soil below. Some of it finds its
way into streams and then on into rivers and lakes. Some types of soil can help
to neutralise the acid - they have what is called a "buffering capacity".
Other soils are already slightly acidic and these
are particularly susceptible to the effects of acid rain.
Acid rain can effect trees in several different
ways, it may:
• dissolve and wash
away the nutrients and minerals in the soil
which help the trees to grow.
• cause the release of
harmful substances such as aluminium into the soil.
• wear away the waxy
protective coating of leaves, damaging them
and preventing them from being able to photosynthesise properly.
A combination of these effects weakens the trees
which means that they can be more easily attacked by diseases and insects or
injured by bad weather. It is not just trees that are affected by acid rain,
other plants may also suffer.
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Lakes and Rivers
It is in aquatic habitats that the effects of acid
rain are most obvious. Acid rain runs off the land and ends up in streams, lakes
and marshes - the rain also falls directly on these areas.
As the acidity of a lake increases, the water
becomes clearer and the numbers of fish and other water animals decline. Some
species of plant and animal are better able to survive in acidic water than
others. Freshwater shrimps, snails, mussels are the most quickly affected by
acidification followed by fish such as minnows, salmon and roach. The roe and
fry (eggs and young) of the fish are the worst affected, the acidity of the
water can cause deformity in young fish and can prevent eggs from hatching
properly.
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The acidity of the water does not just affect
species directly, it also causes toxic substances like aluminium to be released
into the water from the soil, harming fish and other aquatic animals.
Lakes, rivers and marshes each have their own
fragile ecosystem with many different species of plants and animals all
depending on one another to survive. If a species of fish disappears, the
animals which feed on it will gradually disappear too. If the extinct fish used
to feed on a particular species of large insect, that insect population will
start to grow, this in turn will affect the smaller insects or plankton on which
the larger insect feeds.
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Buildings
Every type of material will become eroded sooner or later by
the effects of the climate. Water, wind, ice and snow all help in the erosion
process but unfortunately, acid rain can help to make this natural process even
quicker. Statues, buildings, vehicles, pipes and cables can all suffer. The
worst affected are things made from limestone or sandstone as these types of
rock are particularly susceptible and can be affected by air pollution in
gaseous form as well as by acid rain.
Where is it coming from?
Until relatively recently air pollution has been seen as a
local issue. It was in southern Scandinavia in the late 1950's that the problems
of acid rain were first observed and it was then that people began to realise
that the origins of this pollution were far away in Britain and Northern Europe.
One early answer to industrial air pollution was to build very tall chimneys.
Unfortunately all this does is push the polluting gases up into the clouds
allowing emissions to float away on the wind. The wind carries the pollution
many hundreds of miles away where it eventually falls as acid rain. In this way
Britain has contributed at least 16% of the acid deposition in Norway. Over
ninety percent of Norway's acid pollution comes from other countries. The worst
European polluters are Germany, UK, Poland and Spain, each of them producing
over a million tons of sulphur emissions in 1994. Governments are now beginning
to admit that acid rain is a serious environmental problem and many countries
are now taking steps to reduce the amount of sulphur and nitrogen emissions.
What can be done? Reduce emissions:
• Burning fossil fuels is still one of the cheapest ways to
produce electricity so people are now researching new ways to burn fuel which
don't produce so much pollution.
• Governments need to spend more money on pollution control
even if it does mean an increase in the price of electricity.
• Sulphur can also be 'washed' out of smoke by
spraying a mixture of water and powdered limestone into the smokestack.
• Cars are now fitted with catalytic converters
which remove three dangerous chemicals from exhaust gases.
Find alternative sources of energy
• Governments need to invest in researching
different ways to produce energy.
• Two other sources that are currently used are
hydroelectric and nuclear power. These are 'clean' as far as acid rain goes but
what other impact do they have on our environment?
• Other sources could be solar energy
or windmills but how reliable would these be in places where it is not very
windy or sunny?
• All energy sources have different benefits and
costs and all theses have to be weighed up before any government decides which
of them it is going to use.
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Conserving Resources
• Greater subsidies of public transport by the government to
encourage people to use public transport rather than always travelling by
car.
• Every individual can make an effort to save energy by
switching off lights when they are not being used and using energy-saving
appliances - when less electricity is being used, pollution from power plants
decreases.
• Walking, cycling and sharing cars all reduce the pollution
from vehicles
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Restoring the Damage done by Acid Rain
Lakes and rivers can have powdered limestone added
to them to neutralise the water - this is called "liming". Liming, however, is
expensive and its effects are only temporary - it needs to be continued until
the acid rain stops. The people of Norway and Sweden have successfully used
liming to help restore lakes and streams in their countries. A major liming
programme is currently taking place in Wales.
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