Abstract

The Asia Pacific Mercury Monitoring Network (APMMN) cooperatively measures mercury in precipitation in a network of sites operating in Asia and the Western Pacific region. The network addresses significant data gaps in a region where mercury emission estimates are the highest globally, and available measurement data are limited. The reduction of mercury emissions under the Minamata Convention on Mercury also justifies the need for continent-wide and consistent observations that can help determine the magnitude of the problem and assess the efficacy of reductions over time. The APMMN’s primary objectives are to monitor wet deposition and atmospheric concentrations of mercury and assist partners in developing their own monitoring capabilities. Network planning began in 2012 with wet deposition sampling starting in 2014. Currently, eight network sites measure mercury in precipitation following standardized procedures adapted from the National Atmospheric Deposition Program. The network also has a common regional analytical laboratory (Taiwan), and quality assurance and data flagging procedures, which ensure the network makes scientifically valid and consistent measurements. Results from our ongoing analytical and field quality assurance measurements show minimal contamination in the network and accurate analytical analyses. We are continuing to monitor a potential concentration and precipitation volume bias under certain conditions. The average mercury concentration in precipitation was 11.3 (+9.6) ng L−1 for 139 network samples in 2018. Concentrations for individual sites vary widely. Low averages compare to the low concentrations observed on the U.S. West Coast; while other sites have average concentrations similar to the high values reported from many urban areas in China. Future APMMN goals are to (1) foster new network partnerships, (2) continue to collect, quality assure, and distribute results on the APMMN website, (3) provide training and share best monitoring practices, and (4) establish a gaseous concentration network for estimating dry deposition.

Highlights

  • A New Monitoring Effort for AsiaGay 2, *, David Schmeltz 3 , Mark Olson 2 , Shuenn-Chin Chang 4 , Da-Wei Lin 1 and Ly Sy Phu Nguyen 1

  • Mercury is a global pollutant that can be transported over long distances, across political boundaries and media

  • Asia Pacific Mercury Monitoring Network (APMMN) is consistent with the standard operating procedures (SOP) of the National Atmospheric Deposition Program (NADP), EMEP, and those of Taiwan’s atmospheric wet mercury deposition network

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Summary

A New Monitoring Effort for Asia

Gay 2, *, David Schmeltz 3 , Mark Olson 2 , Shuenn-Chin Chang 4 , Da-Wei Lin 1 and Ly Sy Phu Nguyen 1. National Atmospheric Deposition Program, Wisconsin State Laboratory of Hygiene, 465 Henry Mall, Madison, WI 53706, USA. U.S Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Atmospheric Programs, Clean Air Markets Division, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, MC6204J, Washington, DC 20460, USA

Introduction
Development of the Asia Pacific Mercury Monitoring Network
Methods
Field Operation
Analytical Methodology
Results
Current Sites
Current Quality Assurance Results
Sampler Type Comparisons
Field Results
Future of the APMMN
Summary
Full Text
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