The Integrated Atmospheric Deposition Network (IADN)
The Integrated Atmospheric Deposition Network (IADN)
Hazardous Air Pollutants (HAPs)
Air Emissions in the Great Lakes
Origin and purpose
The Integrated Atmospheric Deposition Network (IADN) has been in operation since 1990 under the guidance of an implementation plan signed in that year. The first implementation plan committed the United States and Canada to work cooperatively towards the initiation of the IADN. It also guided the five original, cooperating IADN agencies in meeting their joint obligation.
Agencies
Since 1999 the program has been comprised of three agencies:
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
- Environment Canada's (EC) Meteorological Service of Canada
- EC's Ecosystem Health Division of Ontario Region (EHD)
In 1997, the IADN Steering Committee reviewed the progress of the IADN program in a technical summary.
The Second Implementation Plan for IADN (IP2), signed in 1998, outlines goals and plans for IADN for the period 1998-2004.
Legislation
IADN is specifically called for, by name, in Annex 15
of the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement (GLWQA). In
Canada, these activities are delivered federally through
the Great Lakes program, and activities delivered at the
provincial level are described in the Canada-Ontario
Agreement (COA). The mandate for IADN also resides in
Section 112(m) of the U.S. Clean Air Act Amendments of
1990 (CAA). The U.S./Canada Binational Great Lakes
Toxics Strategy (BGLTS), signed in 1997, calls for
monitoring of the atmospheric deposition of toxic chemicals
to the Great Lakes basin. Many of the "challenges" in
the BGLTS are directly related to IADN capabilities and
goals.
Goals
- Determine, with a specified degree of confidence, the atmospheric loadings and trends (both spatial and temporal) of priority toxic chemicals to the Great Lakes and its basin on at least a biennial basis;
- Acquire quality-assured air and precipitation concentration measurements, with attention to continuity and consistency of those measurements, so that trend data are not biased by changes in network operations or personnel; and
- Help determine the sources of the continuing input of those chemicals.
Station Placement and Number
IADN has been designed with one Master Station
on
each of the five Great Lakes, supplemented by a number
of Satellite Stations to provide more spatial detail for
deposition. The Master Stations offer the complete range
of measurements made in the Network, measuring wet and
dry deposition of Semivolatile Organic Compounds (SVOCs)
and trace metals. Satellite Stations may contain only a
portion of the measurements made at the Master Stations.
IADN also estimates gas exchange of the SVOCs with the
lake surfaces by using the air concentration
measurements of the SVOCs at these sites in combination
with water concentration measurements of the same
chemicals made by other programs.
The Network is "a leading international effort in the assessment of the role of the atmospheric impacts of persistent, toxic substances on aquatic systems" (Peer Review, 1997). The second phase of IADN is scheduled to run until 2004. No major changes to the Network are anticipated, although potential modifications will be discussed and plans implemented.
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