What is the effect of acid pollution according to iitm?
Answers
Acid Rain - India
It has been found that potential neutralizer of the acidic components of rain water in Indian
region is Calcium which is mainly naturally derived from the soil. As the soil of the most part of
Indian land is Calcareous, it contains abundance of calcium. So, the Indian soil has as yet put a
check on the acidification of rain water, but how long?
Acid Rain Studies in India
There have been many reports of acid rain in India in the past and that too have been only the
episodic. Reported acid precipitations in India includes the acid rain in Chembur and Colaba
industrial areas of Mumbai, in the vicinity of Singrauli Super thermal Power Plant ( average pH
value 5.3), at a rural site of Bhubaneswar (median pH value 5.0) and the Silent Valley (pH=5.3).
Latest reports on acid rain are at Kalyan (pH=5.28), Chembur (pH=4.8), Sinhagad (pH=5.2),
Delhi (pH<5.6) and very rrecently at Panipat (pH<5.6) of National Capital Region of Delhi.
Although the pH value of rainwater at Pune has been reported to lie in the alkaline range, its
value has shown decreasing trend from value of 7.5 in 1986 to 6.2 in 1998. The main reason is
attributed to the decrease in the level of calcium ion and increase in sulphate and nitrate ions.
Rain fall in Agra and Delhi regions have also shown decrease in pH value with the passage of
time. Acid Rain studies are being carried out by IITM since last three decades. The pH values are
higher (pH>7.0) in north & north-west parts of India. They are slightly lower (6.0 ≤ pH ≤7.0) in
northeastern & southern parts of India. The higher pH is due to neutralization of acidic ions (SO4
& NO3) by soil originated cations (Ca, K & Mg) as well as by NH4. However, the pH values are
acidic (pH ≤5.56) at some industrial, rural & remote locations which could be either due to
anthropogenic emissions (Kalyan & Singrauli), acidic soil (Goraur & Mohanbari) or due to thick
cover of vegetation that prevents soil erosion (Trivandrum, Silent Valley & Tungnath). This
work is being carried out at IITM, Pune by a team of scientist led by Dr. P.S.P. Rao.