@article{iiasa13475, volume = {39}, number = {3}, month = {February}, title = {Recovery of acidified: European surface waters}, publisher = {American Chemical Society (ACS)}, year = {2005}, journal = {Environmental Science \& Technology}, doi = {10.1021/es0531778}, pages = {64A--72A}, url = {https://pure.iiasa.ac.at/id/eprint/13475/}, issn = {1520-5851}, abstract = {Twenty years after acid rain captured headlines and forced governments to act, acid deposition has now declined by {$\sim$}60\% in Europe. Some lakes and streams have even begun to recover. Richard F. Wright and 13 colleagues from research institutes in Europe and the United States use models of 12 acid-sensitive regions to predict the continuing effect of declining acid deposition. Will all waters recover, or do acid-rain-causing emissions need to be reduced even more? And how long will the recovery take?}, author = {Wright, R. F. and Larssen, T. and Camarero, L. and Cosby, B. J. and Ferriere, R. C. and Helliwell, R. and Forsius, M. and Jenkins, A. and Kopacek, J. and Majer, V. and Moldan, F. and Posch, M. and Rogora, M. and Sch{\"o}pp, W.} }