Environmental pollution can lower the pH of
precipitation, creating acid rain. This type of acid precipitation can directly
kill some organisms, like trees and fish, devastating ecosystems.
While impacts of acid rain on humans is not
very dramatic, it can indirectly cause health problems, particularly lung
issues. Acid rain has decreased since the late 1970s in North America, where
tighter U.S. regulations have improved air quality.
Acid Rain
All rainwater has a slightly acidic pH level due to ambient levels of carbon
dioxide in the air. Certain industrial pollutants, however, can decrease the pH
excessively, causing it to pose a danger to the environment. Sulfur dioxides and nitrogen oxides, for
example, can have a dramatic effect on rainwater's pH.
Rain contaminated by these compounds changes
the pH of water and soil, making them more acidic. Certain trees and fish have
adapted to specific pH levels and changes in pH can kill them, leaving parts of
forests, lakes and rivers devoid of life.
Direct Effect of Acid Rain
on Humans
While acid tends to bring to mind the image of
corrosive chemicals dissolving metals and other materials, acid precipitation
does not have direct effects on human health. Acid rain does not have an acidic
enough pH to burn human skin.
According to the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, "Swimming in an acidic lake or walking in an acidic puddle is no
more harmful to people than swimming or walking in clean water." While
acid rain cannot burn your skin, it is linked to several indirect health
effects.
Indirect Effects of
Acid Rain
Everything is connected in air quality. While
acid rain cannot harm humans directly, the sulfur dioxide that creates it can
cause health problems. Specifically, sulfur dioxide particles in the air can
encourage chronic lung problems, like asthma and bronchitis.
Additionally, the nitrogen oxides that create acid rain
promote the formation of ground-level ozone. While ozone high above the Earth helps block
ultraviolet radiation, ground-level ozone promotes severe lung problems like
chronic pneumonia and emphysema.
When acid rains fall at places located at
higher altitudes, acid rains lead to thick acidic fog that hangs low, affecting
visibility and causing irritation to eyes and nose. Acidic fog also affects
trees and plants and causes their leaves to turn brown and wilt.
Apart from the effects of acid rain on air
quality, acid rains also greatly affect environmental balance. Acid rain
falling directly on trees and crops can harm them. Runoff from acid rain
leaches minerals such as aluminum from soil, thereby decreasing its pH and
making the soil acidic. Acidic soil is detrimental for the growth of crops and
results in damaged harvests.
When the acidic runoff flows into lakes,
rivers and seas, it disturbs the balance of these aquatic ecosystems and causes injury or
even death of aquatic organisms. Imbalance in aquatic ecosystems has an adverse
effect on fishing industry.
Environmental Successes
In some ways, the reduction of acid rain in
the United States is one of the biggest successes of environmental policy.
Since the 1970s, various laws have reduced the emission of sulfur dioxides and
nitrogen oxides from power plants, including the Clean Air Act of 1970 and the
Canada-United States Air Quality Agreement of 1991.
The longest continuous rain-chemistry
monitoring station in North America, the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forrest in
New Hampshire, found that hydrogen ion concentration (pH) decreased by roughly
60 percent since the 1960s.
The EPA estimates that the reduction in the
acid rain-producing emissions has saved $50 billion in health care costs.
Despite the overall positive picture, some areas in New England are still
recovering.
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