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Sulphur and nitrogen emissions continue to fall in EU-15

News Published 13 Oct 2006 Last modified 21 Jun 2016
1 min read
Emissions of nitrogen oxides are down by 30% since the early 1990’s, according to a report released today by the European Environment Agency. The report, ‘Annual European Community LRTAP Convention emission inventory 1990-2004’ also says that emissions of sulphur (SOx) as reported by Member States dropped by 70% between 1990 and 2004 within the EU-15.

Emissions reductions took place in many of the sectors reported by countries – transport, energy, agriculture and waste, and at EU-15 level emission reductions were recorded with other main air pollutants - carbon monoxide (-50%) ammonia (-8%) and Non methane volatile organic compounds (NMVOC) (-45%).

The inventory report shows emission trends and data availability for the EU-25, and is published annually. Data from Member States are compiled by the European Environment Agency on behalf of the European Commission as part of the Community’s legal reporting obligations for the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe Convention on Long-Range Transboundary Air Pollution (UNECE LRTAP Convention). This report therefore specifically documents the emissions data officially reported by Member States. Other EEA publications provide an assessment of why changes in the reported emissions have occurred.

CSI 001 - Emissions of acidifying substances
CSI 002 - Emissions of ozone precursors
CSI 003 - Emissions of primary particles and secondary particulate precursors

In several instances, total emissions of air pollutants for the EU-25 were not fully estimated due to a lack of data. As a result, future recommendations include improving the completeness of submissions received from Member States as well as developing more formal quality assurance procedures.

Link :
Annual European Community LRTAP Convention Emission Inventory 1990-2004


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