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EPA: Clean Water Act Could be Used to Fight Acid in Oceans

Posted by Will Ramos on Thursday, April 8th, 2010 at 3:05 pm
Filed under: Action,News & Resources,Policy
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Clean Water ActThe Environmental Protection Agency is exploring whether to use the Clean Water Act to control greenhouse gas emissions, which are turning the oceans acidic at a rate that’s alarmed some scientists.

(From Bandenton.com / By Les Blumenthal) WASHINGTON  — With climate change legislation stalled in Congress, the Clean Water Act would serve as a second front, as the Obama administration has sought to use the Clean Air Act to rein in emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases administratively.

Since the dawn of the industrial age, acid levels in the oceans have increased 30 percent. Currently, the oceans are absorbing 22 million tons of carbon dioxide a day.

Among other things, scientists worry that the increase in acidity could interrupt the delicate marine food chain, which ranges from microscopic plankton to whales.

“There are all sorts of evils associated with this,” said Robert Paine, an emeritus professor of biology at the University of Washington.

The situation is especially acute along the West Coast. Northwest winds during the summer cause upwelling, which brings deep water to the surface along the continental shelf from Queen Charlotte Sound in British Columbia to Baja California.

The water in the deep Pacific Ocean is already more acidic than shallower water is because it’s absorbed the carbon dioxide that’s produced as animals and plants decompose. Some of the deep water in the Pacific hasn’t been to the surface for 1,000 or more years.

By the end of the century, that deep water is expected to be 150 percent more acidic than it is now, and as it’s brought to the surface by upwelling, it’s exposed to even more carbon dioxide.

“The immensity of the problem on the West Coast is of serious concern,” said Richard Feely, an oceanographer with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in Seattle.

Scientists suspect that acidic water connected with upwelling killed several billion oyster, clam and mussel larvae that were being raised at the Whiskey Creek Shellfish Hatchery near Tillamook on the Oregon coast in the summer of 2008. The hatchery provides baby shellfish to growers up and down the West Coast.

Shellfish growers in Washington state, who supply one-sixth of the nation’s oysters, increasingly are concerned that corrosive ocean water entering coastal bays could threaten their $111 million industry.

Acid levels in other areas of upwelling — off Africa, South America and Portugal — haven’t been studied as intensely as those off the U.S. West Coast have.

Feely said the oceans’ acidity levels were higher than they’d been at any time in the past 20 million years. Based on “pretty good” evidence, Feely said, previous high acid levels in the oceans have caused mass extinctions of marine plants and animals, which can take 2 million to 10 million years to re-evolve.

“The decisions we make now, over the next 50 years, will be felt over hundreds of thousands of years,” he said.


Related Posts:

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  • EPA to Allow States Address Rising Ocean Acidity

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ONW: Week of May 14, 2012 – Number 164

ONW: Week of May 14, 2012 – Number 164

The staff here at Ocean Leadership works hard to make certain that each week we provide you with the most useful and timely information regarding our efforts, activities of the community, news from Capitol Hill, and all opportunities, jobs and internships that we feel you might find beneficial.

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Program Update: Advocacy – April 2012

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Congressional appropriators got off to an early start this spring with both the House and Senate Appropriations Committees approving FY 2013 Commerce-Justice-Science spending bills in April with House and Senate floor consideration expected this month.

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