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AIR POLLUTION

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Very stable - hardly any weather, pilots like to fly here. Outdoor Air Pollution ... life (over 10% of lakes in the Adirondacks are too acidic to support fish) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: AIR POLLUTION


1
AIR POLLUTION
  • Chapter 17

2
The Atmosphere
  • Two lowest layers figure 17.1
  • Troposphere
  • Stratosphere

3
Troposphere
  • Surface gt 7 or 8 miles
  • Contains 75 of mass of Es air
  • 78 N2, 21 O2, lt1 Ar
  • Convection or turning
  • Where almost all weather occurs
  • Temperature decreases w/ altitude
  • Ozone is a pollutant here!
  • Bad ozone

4
Stratosphere
  • From top of troposphere gt 30 miles
  • Lower over poles, higher in tropics
  • Much lower pressure
  • Contains ozone layer gt
  • Temp slightly increases w/ altitude
  • This is the good ozone
  • Very stable - hardly any weather, pilots like to
    fly here

5
Outdoor Air Pollution
  • Pollutants, smog, acid deposition

6
Air Pollution Types
  • Primary pollutants
  • Secondary pollutants

7
Primary Pollutants
  • Put in air directly by human or natural activities

8
Primary Pollutants
  • Carbon oxides (CO and CO2)
  • Nitrogen oxides (NOx)
  • Sulfur oxides (SO2 and SO3)
  • Volatile organic compounds (VOCs)
  • Smelly stuff in car exhaust unburned
    hydrocarbons (HC)
  • Evaporated fuel
  • Particulates (solid or liquid)

9
Secondary
  • Products of chemical reaction of primary
    pollutants with other air components and sunlight
  • Photochemical smog is a mixture of primary and
    secondary pollutants reacted with sunlight

10
Photochemical Smog
  • Nitrogen oxides VOCs sunlight
  • gt bad ozone lots of chemicals
  • More common in cities with sunny, warm, dry
    climates and lots of motor vehicles
  • Can occur naturally Blue Ridge Mts
  • E.g., Los Angeles Air pollution capital of U.S.

11
Industrial Smog
  • Traditional smog smoke fog
  • Fog sulfur oxides sulfuric acid particulate
    matter
  • Coal and heavy oil burning
  • Mostly in winter
  • Almost nonexistent in MDCs today due to pollution
    controls
  • Still occurs in China, E. Europe

12
Thermal Inversion
  • Worsens smog conditions (photochemical or
    industrial)
  • Happens mostly in valleys, fig 17-4 Warm air
    forms a lid over cooler air (inversion)
  • Air pollutants trapped in valley

13
Figure 17.4 Donora, PA 1948, Coal burning
thermal inversion
14
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15
Acid Deposition
  • Some fossil fuels (mainly coal) can contain
    significant amounts of sulfur (also some nitrogen
    cmps)
  • When burned, SO2 and NOx are released and
  • Dissolve in H2O to form acids (lower pH)
  • gt Acid rain

16
Acid rain
  • Downwind of industrial areas
  • E.g., Industrial midwest prevailing westerlies
    gt
  • Causes acid rain in, for example, Ontario and
    Upstate New York

17
Acid rain
  • Kills trees, aquatic life (over 10 of lakes in
    the Adirondacks are too acidic to support fish)
  • European countries also affected

18
SOLUTIONS
19
Clean Air Acts
  • 1970, 1977, 1990
  • Require EPA to establish national ambient air
    quality standards (NAAQS) for 6 outdoor
    pollutants
  • Maximum allowable levels of each
  • Worked U.S. reduced levels of 5 pollutants from
    1970 94 (all but NOx)
  • 2000 EPA Study on effectiveness of CAA p. 397
    Overall fairly effective

20
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21
PREVENTION !
  • Improved energy efficiency
  • Reduce fossil fuel use
  • Slow population growth
  • Incentives like full-cost pricing
  • Internalize externalities
  • National (rather than state) air quality
    standards (Why?)
  • Export appropriate tech. to LDCs
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