Improving China’s Acid Rain Control Strategy

The study, which suggests that government officials adapt a more comprehensive pollution control strategy that includes a new emphasis on cutting nitrogen emissions, is scheduled for the Nov. 1 issue of ACS’ Environmental Science & Technology, a semi-monthly journal.

Lei Duan and colleagues explain that China is trying to stop soil acidification by reducing sulfur dioxide pollution from electric power plant smokestacks. Those emissions cause acid rain, which in turn has made vast areas of farmland more acid and less productive. China’s is striving for a 10 percent reduction in sulfur dioxide emissions by 2010, a policy that seems have had only a limited impact so far, the researchers say. However, China has paid little attention to pollution from nitrogen oxides, which also contribute to acid rain and soil contamination.

The scientists’ analysis found that the benefits of sulfur dioxide reductions will almost be offset by increased nitrogen emissions. To control this problem, “China needs a multipollutant control strategy that integrates measures to reduce sulfur, nitrogen, and particulate matter,” the article notes.

ARTICLE #2 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
“Soil Acidification in China: Is Controlling SO2 Emissions Enough?”
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http://pubs.acs.org/stoken/presspac/presspac/full/10.1021/es901430n
CONTACT:
Lei Duan, Ph.D.
Tsinghua University
Beijing, China
Phone: (+86-10)62771403
Fax: (+86-10)62773650
Email: lduan@tsinghua.edu.cn

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