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Air pollution - State and impacts (Slovenia)

SOER 2010 Common environmental theme (Deprecated)
This is an old version, kept for reference only.

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Increased air pollution affects human health, but also causes damage to ecosystems.
Topic
Air pollution Air pollution
more info
Environmental Agency of the Republic of Slovenia
Organisation name
Environmental Agency of the Republic of Slovenia
Reporting country
Slovenia
Organisation website
Organisation website
Contact link
Contact link
Last updated
03 Jan 2011
Content license
CC By 2.5
Content provider
Environmental Agency of the Republic of Slovenia
Published: 05 Nov 2010 Modified: 11 May 2020 Feed synced: 03 Jan 2011 original
Key message

Ambient air quality is satisfactory. Despite the fact that the pollution with particulate matter and ozone decreases, the proportion of children taken to hospital due to respiratory disease and asthma is increasing.

Concentrations of PM10, especially in some parts of urban areas, exceed the daily limit concentrations of 50 ug/m3 on more than 35 days a year. Identifying the sources of particulates clearly shows that the major contributors are (road) transport, transboundary air pollution and resuspension, and in the winter months road salting, individual heating appliances and unfavourable weather conditions.

PM10 concentrations are generally higher in winter than in summer, in the interior of Slovenia from 70 % to 100 %, and in Primorska up to 20 %. Pollution from PM10 made 2003 an especially troublesome year, mainly owing to the long drought and low rainfall. At that time, as much as 90 % of the urban population of Slovenia was exposed to more than 100 days daily PM10 concentrations above the limit, Maribor – 185 days; Celje – 146 days; Zagorje – 140 days; and Ljubljana – 116 days. Since 2003, daily concentrations have fallen, but limit values are still exceeded from time to time. Particular mention should be made of the Zasavje region, a poorly ventilated basin with the highest number of excessive readings a year – in 2008 more than 100. This results from transport and industrial sources as well as the unfavourable basin geography that causes unfavourable temperature inversions, particularly in winter (ZR08, in Slovene only).

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Filed under: SOER2010, air pollution
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