Abstract

To reduce atmospheric deposition, in 1990 Congress passed amendments to the Clean Air Act requiring electric utility power plants to decrease emissions of sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides, with Phase I beginning in 1995. We analyzed precipitation volume, wet deposition, and concentration of the sum of base cations measured at 12 National Atmospheric Deposition Program sites in Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, and Vermont. We compared five-year means prior to and following passage of the amendments and for five years after the implementation of Phase I. Whereas only one of the monitoring stations recorded a decline in base cation deposition, three sites out of the 12 showed a decline in base cation concentration. None of the sites exhibited a significant change in precipitation volume. Continued deposition of base cations may help to reduce the detrimental effects of acidic deposition.

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