
US could see return of acid rain if pollution rules are quashed, says scientist who first discovered it
A blitzkrieg launched by Trump's Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) upon clean air and water regulations could revert the US to a time when cities were routinely shrouded in smog and even help usher back acid rain, according to Gene Likens, whose experiments helped identify acidic rainwater in the 1960s.
While drastic improvements in America's air quality have seemingly consigned acid rain to a problem belonging to a bygone era, Likens said if rules curbing toxic emissions from power plants, cars and trucks are aggressively scaled back, the specter of acid rain could again haunt the US.
'I'm very worried that might happen, it's certainly not impossible that it could happen,' Likens, 90, told the Guardian. Likens is still involved in a long-term monitoring project, stretching back to 1976, to sample rainwater for acidity but this program has just had its funding cut by the Trump administration.
'I hope we don't go back to the old days, so these rollbacks are very alarming,' Likens said. 'I care about the health of my children and grandchildren, I want them to have clean air to breathe. I care about clean water and clean and healthy soil, I want them to have that too.'
It was in 1963 when Likens, as a young scientist, sampled rainwater in the Hubbard Brook Experimental forest in the White Mountains of New Hampshire and found that it was 100 times more acidic than expected. 'That was really an 'a-ha!' moment that led us to question what was happening,' he said.
Years of subsequent study by Likens and other scientists ascertained that pollution wafting from coal-fired power plants in the American midwest was being transported by the wind, primarily to the eastern US and Canada. Sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides in the pollution reacted with water and oxygen to form sulfuric and nitric acids, combining with water to fall to the ground as acid rain.
By 1980, the average rainfall in the US was 10 times more acidic than normal, having a devastating environmental impact. Lakes and streams became too acidic to support fish and amphibians, nutrients were stripped from soil and the rain damaged plants, trees and even buildings.
A national outcry about acid rain, with newspaper cartoonists depicting people's umbrellas dissolving and mounting evidence presented by Likens and others in public talks eventually spurred political action.
In 1990, an update to the Clean Air Act targeting acid rain by reducing power plant pollution was passed resoundingly by Congress and signed by President George HW Bush, a Republican. 'Every city in America should have clean air,' Bush said as he signed the bill. 'With this legislation I firmly believe we will.'
'Acid rain is an example of a major environmental success story – the public spoke up and the politicians listened,' said Likens. Recent sampling of rainwater and soils in the White Mountains region shows acidity levels have fallen by 85% since a peak period in the 1970s, although Likens said the soil remains degraded and any return of acid rain to ecosystems in this fragile state would be disastrous.
'If the Trump administration starts releasing controls on emissions we are going to destroy that success story,' he said.
The plan by the EPA to eliminate or weaken 31 regulations, a move called a 'dagger straight into the heart of the climate change religion' by the agency's administrator, Lee Zeldin, risks many thousands of extra deaths and a litany of heart, lung and other illnesses, according to the EPA's own estimates of the rules' benefits.
However, the exact scale of the rollbacks will probably take several years and various court battles to become fully apparent. The US, too, is a very different country from the one before the EPA's foundation in 1970, when rampant air pollution blotted out the skies in cities such as New York and Los Angeles and rivers were so polluted they caught fire.
Major air pollutants have plummeted in recent decades, due to regulations as well as technological upgrades to power plants and vehicle catalytic converters. Coal, meanwhile, has declined as a power source in favor of cleaner-burning gas and renewables, although Trump has sought to stymie clean energy and help resurrect coal, the dirtiest of fossil fuels.
'I don't think it's likely we will see acid rain again because I don't think there will be a comeback for coal – the main beneficiary of a relaxation in regulations will probably be gas,' said William Reilly, who was EPA administrator in 1990 when the federal action on acid rain was taken.
Reilly said the Clean Air Act amendments were a 'home run' victory for public health and a high point in bipartisan cooperation between Republicans and Democrats on the environment. He added the Trump administration was now seeking to take the US in a radically different direction.
'I do think this administration will take us back to a pre-EPA world,' Reilly said. 'That will mean unbreathable air, places where there is pollution that you can see, rivers that burn. That is what it was like before and that is what it could be like again if enforcement is cut back.'
Other scientists said a return of acid rain was possible, although it would be gradual rather than immediate. 'It's not like you'll wake up tomorrow and it will be 1975 in terms of acid rain but we could move in that direction,' said Richard Peltier, an environmental scientist at the University of Massachusetts.
'It would take a number of years but why would we want to do that? It's frustrating because we know improved air quality is good for the public. There is a viewpoint now that scientists are the bad guys, that the science is corrupt – things that just aren't true.'
Several of the rules targeted for reversal by Trump's EPA are aimed at slashing large amounts of sulfur dioxide, among other pollutants, such as standards around coal plant emissions. 'We aren't sure how far back Mr Zeldin is thinking of taking this,' said Murray McBride, a crop and soil scientist at Cornell University. 'It would take a dramatic rollback to allow that much sulphur dioxide, but it's possible.'
After alerting Americans to the dangers of acid rain, Likens founded the Institute of Ecosystem Studies (now the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies) to conduct further research.
At Cornell University he then set up a separate monitoring system, near New York's Finger Lakes, which has been running since 1976 but had its funding cut this month by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa) as part of a Trump administration effort to shrink the size of government.
'There was no explanation given why they cut the funding and I'm not sure if we can keep the project going,' said Likens, who conducts this work himself alongside two technicians. 'If we don't have the funding for research to look at what's happening, we are just blind. It's an awful way for the country to go.'
Likens continues to conduct lectures, often to people who were not born when acid rain was a major problem in the US. 'I try to explain to them that this was one of the few environmental success stories that we have,' he said. 'To see that get turned around is just sad. It makes me extremely sad.'
An EPA spokesperson did not answer questions about a potential return of acid rain or how the agency will ensure more people won't become sick or die because of the regulatory rollbacks.
'The US can protect the environment and grow the economy at the same time,' the spokesperson said, adding that the rollbacks were 'the greatest and most consequential day of deregulation in American history.'
'This is a very important change from the previous administration's attempts to shut down American energy and make our citizens more reliant on foreign fossil fuels, resulting in worse environmental outcomes globally, billions in fresh funding to many of our nation's adversaries at the expense to all Americans, and economic pain on those who can least afford it.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Glasgow Times
15 hours ago
- Glasgow Times
Scottish Nobel chemist predicts Alzheimer's drug in 5 years
Professor David MacMillan, originally from North Lanarkshire and now based at Princeton University, told the BBC's Scotcast podcast: 'I would bet my house that within five years we have marketed drugs for Alzheimer's.' He said the rapid pace of development in neurological research gave him confidence that major treatment breakthroughs are close, calling the progress "phenomenal". READ MORE: Meet the 63-year-old 'Summer Santa' zip sliding along the Clyde for cancer care READ MORE: Huge new park and ride opens at busy train station near Glasgow MacMillan, whose father and aunt both suffered from dementia, was awarded the 2021 Nobel Prize in Chemistry alongside Professor Benjamin List for developing a revolutionary method of constructing molecules. Their discovery has already contributed to new approaches in treating Alzheimer's, as well as cancer and cardiovascular disease. He used his share of the prize money to launch The May and Billy MacMillan Foundation, named after his parents, to fund educational opportunities for underprivileged young Scots. Education, he said, was his 'passport to the world". Born in New Stevenston, MacMillan studied chemistry at the University of Glasgow before moving to the United States for postgraduate research. After academic posts at Harvard and Berkeley, he joined Princeton in 2006. While he has long praised the scale and ambition of American scientific research, MacMillan expressed concern about recent political pressure on universities. His Princeton research group, he said, has gone without government funding for seven months for the first time in 25 years. He attributed this to growing hostility towards higher education to the Trump-Vance administration. He warned that the cuts could reflect a broader attempt to exert political control over academic institutions, describing the trend as 'quite sinister.' Despite these challenges, MacMillan said he has no immediate plans to return to Scotland, though he visits regularly to see family and, now, a close friend. After winning the Nobel, he received an unexpected congratulatory call from Sir Alex Ferguson. The two Glaswegians have since become friends and plan to attend a Manchester United match together later this year. MacMillan's achievements have also been honoured in Scotland's National Portrait Gallery, where a new painting by Christabel Blackburn depicts him in his Princeton office. A lab coat from his former school, Bellshill Academy, hangs in the background – a quiet reminder of how far he has come.


Reuters
16 hours ago
- Reuters
Trump's lightning reactor build program ignites nuclear sector
July 31 - In a flurry of executive orders, President Trump has mandated the Department of Energy (DOE) to authorise and develop three pilot small modular reactors (SMRs) in a bid to accelerate nuclear power deployment and meet soaring demand from AI. The Trump administration wants the pilot reactors to achieve "criticality" by July 4, 2026, requiring completion of design, licensing and testing within a year. Trump also directed the Department of Defense (DOD) to commission its own pilot reactor within three years. SMRs promise lower upfront capital costs and shorter construction times than conventional large reactors, but first of a kind (FOAK) designs have taken years to gain regulatory approval and investors have been wary of development and construction risks. Soaring demand from Big Tech has catalysed interest in nuclear power and developers say small reactors can be built in line with rising demand from data centers. Trump's executive orders also directed the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) to process licence approvals for new reactors within 18 months and establish a process for "high-volume licensing of micro reactors and modular reactors, including allowing for standardized applications." The DOE and DOD will seek to source private funding for the construction and operation of nuclear fuel recycling, reprocessing, and fabrication capabilities, the White House said. The government aims to increase U.S. nuclear capacity from about 100 GW today to 400 GW by 2050 and only three large reactors have entered commercial operation this century. CHART: Annual US nuclear power installations DOE authorization of SMR designs will help unlock private funding, provide a fast-track licensing approach and help establish the required supply chains and talent pipeline, a DOE spokesperson told Reuters Events. The executive orders provide a "much-needed catalyst" for SMR deployment in the civilian sector by "circumventing some of the structural and regulatory bottlenecks that have historically slowed down progress,' James Walker, CEO of micro reactor developer Nano Nuclear Energy, said. The federal actions will effectively guarantee initial customers and testing grounds for new reactors, unlock procurement pathways and create viable use cases, Walker said. Faster deployment The DOE closed its application window for reactor developers on June 21 and applications will be assessed based on criteria including technological readiness, siting evaluations, financial viability and a detailed plan for achieving criticality. The DOE is seeking designs that have a "reasonable chance' of achieving criticality by July 2026, the DOE spokesperson said. To speed up the process, the department is streamlining its authorization process and eliminating or expediting its environmental reviews for permits and approvals, the spokesperson noted. CHART: Small modular reactor projects by country Developing projects on DOE and DOD land should shorten approval and deployment timelines. The DOE-owned Idaho National Laboratory (INL) is one potential location for the test reactors, as well as Sandia National Labs which has sites in New Mexico and California, as well as numerous DOD sites. Shifting the deployment of FOAK reactors onto lands under DOE or DOD control will help to remove obstacles to development, Walker said. FOAK reactors 'often languish due to lack of customers and high regulatory uncertainty,' Walker said. The executive orders require the NRC to expedite the approval process for designs that the DOE or DOD have demonstrated have the ability to function safely. Download exclusive insights from the Reuters Events: SMR & Advanced Reactor 2025 conference in May. Applicants will be responsible for all design, manufacturing, construction, operating and decommissioning costs. While the projects will not receive federal funding, the DOE will provide federal resources as part of the application process, the DOE spokesperson noted. The executive orders could see multiple FOAK reactors deployed by the end of the decade and these reactors will each generate operational data, workforce expertise and bolster public confidence to catalyze the commercial market, Walker said. 'Difficult' deadline Developers of micro reactors or SMRs that have high technology readiness and a clear pathway to manufacturing will benefit most from the federal development initiatives, Walker said. Companies like BWX, Holtec, Westinghouse and NuScale are developing SMRs based on existing light water reactor (LWR) technology but a number of advanced reactor developers and micro reactor developers are also seeking to deploy rapidly in the coming years and signing early commercial arrangements with large offtakers including tech groups. Trump's orders could "ensure we get more near term deployment of known technologies' but might not help 'more exotic or 4th generation [nuclear] tech," Patrick O'Brien, Director, Government Affairs and Communications at Holtec International, told Reuters Events. Holtec is one of a small group of developers seeking to win DOE funds for SMRs based on LWR technology, allocated through a separate funding round. For exclusive nuclear insights, sign up to our newsletter. Micro reactors would be more likely to achieve the criticality deadline of July 2026 on federal sites, due to their smaller size, O'Brien said. Building a whole advanced reactor system in a year would be 'extremely difficult' because of supply chain constraints, Walker warned. Instead, the DOE could adjust its definition of criticality to specify that only fuel assembly rather than the entire reactor must reach criticality by the July 2026 deadline, he said.


Economist
18 hours ago
- Economist
How to build a ship for interstellar travel
But international regulation and precarious funding threaten their efforts Trump's U-turn on chip-export controls could be a boon The phenomenon could be harnessed to boost immunotherapy Treatment is improving, even for the most dangerous To maintain the bombs, and build new ones, scientists are pushing the frontiers of physics A new model is finding connections spanning the Roman world