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Indicator Specification
No related rationale has been specified.
This indicator shows the fraction of the EU-28 urban population that is potentially exposed to ambient air concentrations of six key pollutants (PM2.5, PM10, O3, NO2, SO2 and BaP) that are in excess of the EU limit or target values (EU, 2004, 2008) set for the protection of human health, and to concentrations of these pollutants in excess of the 2005 WHO Guidelines (WHO, 2000, 2006).
The indicator is based on measurements of air pollutants as reported under the Air Quality Directives (EU, 2004, 2008) and the Decisions on the exchange of information (EU, 1997, 2011).
Concentration:
Urban population (POP): number of inhabitants in the 'core city' and, from 2016, the 'greater city' of the Urban Audit cities represented by the urban stations taken into account in the calculations.
Percentage of the urban population.
This indicator is relevant for current European air quality legislation related to the protection of human health in the Air Quality Directives 2004/107/EC and 2008/50/EC (EU, 2004, 2008). Besides EU policies on air quality, it is also related to the 2005 WHO Air Quality Guidelines (WHO, 2000, 2006) for protecting public health. The WHO has recently published new air quality guidelines (WHO, 2021) that will be considered in future analysis.
The objective of some strategic policy directions such as the Seventh Environment Action Programme (7th EAP) (EC, 2013a) or the Clean Air for Europe Programme (EC, 2013) is to achieve levels of air quality that do not give rise to significant negative impacts on, and risks to, human health and the environment.
The EU Clean Air Policy Package, adopted by the European Commission on 18 December 2013, proposes in the Communication 'A Clean Air Programme for Europe' (EC, 2013) the short-term objective of achieving full compliance with existing legislation by 2020 at the latest; and the long-term objective of no exceedances of the WHO guideline levels for human health.
The European Green Deal (EC, 2019), adopted by the European Commission on 11 December 2019, will improve the well-being and health of citizens and future generations by providing, among others, fresh air, more public transport, cleaner energy or longer lasting products. The European Green Deal proposes to revise the EU air quality standards to align them more closely with the World Health Organization recommendations. In this context, The Zero Pollution Action Plan (EC, 2021), has the 2050 vision of reducing air pollution to levels no longer considered harmful to health and natural ecosystems and the 2030 target of reducing premature deaths due to air pollution by more than 55%, in comparison with those in 2005.
Finally, the European Commission published a proposal for an 8th Environment Action Programme (EAP) (EC, 2020) on 14 October 2020. The proposal supports the environment objectives of the European Green Deal and reiterate the commitment to the 7th EAP’s 2050 vision.
No related targets has been specified.
No related policy documents have been specified
Information on cities is obtained from Urban Audit (UA) data (Eurostat, 2014). UA data collection, maintained by Eurostat, provides information and comparable measurements on the different aspects of the quality of urban life in selected European cities. The urban population considered is the total number of people represented by any of the urban monitoring stations in the 'core city' and, from 2016, the 'greater city' of the UA cities taking part in the calculations.
Initially, stations in the EEA air-quality database are spatially joined with UA core and, from 2016, greater cities in a geographical information system in order to select those stations that fall within the boundaries of the cities included in the UA collection. The selected stations include station types classified as 'urban traffic', 'suburban traffic', 'urban background' and 'suburban background'. Stations classified as 'industrial' are influenced by other local emissions and such environments are generally not representative for residential areas. The industrial stations are therefore not selected for the indicator calculations.
According to a study for the European Commission by Entec UK Limited (EC, 2006), in Europe, on average, 5% of the city population lives closer than 100 metres from major roads and is therefore potentially exposed to concentrations measured at traffic stations. The remaining 95% of the city population is assumed to be exposed to urban and suburban background concentrations.
These percentages vary from country to country. To calculate them, national data on the population living closer than 100 metres from major roads have been taken from Appendix D (EC, 2006). These data have been divided by the total population figures for 2001 according to the Eurostat census (Eurostat, 2014a).
For Croatia, Malta and the United Kingdom there are no data on the 2001 population in that census, so the data in the publication (EC, 2007) have been used. Furthermore, for Cyprus and Malta there are no data for people living close to roads (EC, 2006), so for them, and also for Turkey, the average value of 5% was used.
For PM10, PM2.5, O3, NO2 and SO2, only stations with at least 75% of valid data per calendar year are used; that is, in the case of daily values, those having more than 274 valid daily values per calendar year (or 275 days in a leap year), and in the case of hourly values, those having more than 6,570 valid hourly values per calendar year (or 6,588 hours in a leap year). For BaP, the minimum data time coverage accepted is 14% (51 days), according to the data quality objectives related to indicative measurements in the Directive 2004/107/EU (EU, 2004).
For every year, each city (i) in country (j) and every pollutant, the total number of urban or suburban traffic stations (nit) and the total number of urban or suburban background stations (nib) are obtained. Ptj % of the total population of the city (Popi) is proportionally assigned to each of the traffic stations and Pbj % of Popi is proportionally assigned to each of the background stations. So, every traffic station has an allocated population equal to ((Ptj / 100) * Popi / nit) and every background station has an allocated population equal to ((Pbj /100) *Popi / nib).
No gap filling is applied in the air quality data in the EEA air quality database.
For countries with no information on cities and/or population in the Urban Audit data collection (Lichtenstein and Turkey), population data have been retrieved from http://www.citypopulation.de/. The gap filled mapping was done using the “station_city” attribute found in the EEA air quality database (AirBase) and compared with the city names found at http://www.citypopulation.de/. The London geometry was derived from the URAU2007 data set in the first two assessment versions.
EC, 2006 - Development of a methodology to assess the population exposed to high levels of noise and air pollution close to major transport infrastructure, prepared by Entec UK Limited (Appendix D).
EC, 2007 - EUROPE IN FIGURES — Eurostat yearbook 2006-07.
EC, 2013, Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament, the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions — ‘A clean air programme for Europe’ (COM(2013) 918 final).
EC, 2019, Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament, the European Council, the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions — The European Green Deal (COM/2019/640 final)
EC, 2020, Proposal for a Decision of the European Parliament and of the Council on a General Union Environment Action Programme to 2030 (COM/2020/652 final)
EC, 2021, Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament, the Council, the European Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions — Pathway to a Healthy Planet for All EU Action Plan: 'Towards Zero Pollution for Air, Water and Soil' (COM/2021/400 final)
EU, 1997 - Council Decision 97/101/EC on the exchange of information and data on ambient air quality, replaced by (EU, 2011).
EU, 2011 - Commission Implementing Decision 2011/850/EU laying down rules for Directive 2004/107/EC and 2008/50/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council as regards the reciprocal exchange of information and reporting on ambient air.
Eurostat, 2014a - Population by sex, age group and country of citizenship.
Eurostat, 2014b - Statistics on European cities.
Eurostat, 2014c - Urban Audit.
Eurostat, 2016, Urban Europe — statistics on cities, towns and suburbs, Publication Office of the European Union, Luxembourg .
WHO, 2000 - Air Quality Guidelines for Europe. Second edition. WHO Regional Publications, European Series, No. 91. World Health Organization, Regional Office for Europe, Copenhagen, Denmark.
WHO, 2006 - WHO air quality guidelines for particulate matter, ozone, nitrogen dioxide and sulphur dioxide. Global update 2005. World Health Organization, Regional Office for Europe, Copenhagen, Denmark.
WHO, 2014 - Burden of disease from ambient air pollution for 2012 — Summary of results, World Health Organization, Geneva.
WHO, 2021 - WHO global air quality guidelines: particulate matter (PM2.5 and PM10), ozone, nitrogen dioxide, sulfur dioxide and carbon monoxide. World Health Organization.
Policy references
EU, 2004 - Directive 2004/107/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 15 December 2004 relating to arsenic, cadmium, mercury, nickel and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons in ambient air.
EU, 2008, Directive 2008/50/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 21 May 2008 on ambient air quality and cleaner air for Europe (OJ L 152, 11.6.2008, pp. 1-44).
EU, 2016, Directive (EU) 2016/2284 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 14 December 2016 on the reduction of national emissions of certain atmospheric pollutants, amending Directive 2003/35/EC and repealing Directive 2001/81/EC (OJ L 344, 17.12.2016, p. 1–31).
No related methodology for gap filling has been specified.
No related methodology uncertainty has been specified.
No related data sets uncertainty has been specified.
No related rationale uncertainty has been specified.
Work specified here requires to be completed within 1 year from now.
Work specified here will require more than 1 year (from now) to be completed.
For references, please go to https://www.eea.europa.eu/data-and-maps/indicators/exceedance-of-air-quality-limit-4 or scan the QR code.
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