SUMMARY
This report summarises the annual
information on ozone monitoring stations and exceedances of ozone
threshold values during 1995 transmitted by the Member States in
the framework of Council Directive 92/72/EEC on air pollution by
ozone. On 6 August 1996 information for the calendar year 1995
had been received from all 15 Member States. All information has
been submitted in computer readable form.
An evaluation of the exceedances and annual
statistics for 1995 is presented.
The following conclusions are reached:
- Ozone monitoring data for the year
1995 have been received from 858 stations within the 15
EU Member States. The quality and quantity of the
information supplied by the Member States for 1995 is
strongly improved compared to 1994.
- Spatial coverage and documentation on
monitoring data quality need improvement. Depending on
the local situation, the ozone monitoring stations are
characterized as rural, urban, street or other (e.g.
industrial). The present subset of rural stations is not
representative for the land area of the EU: the subset is
estimated to cover only 40-50%. The geographical coverage
of the rural stations is rather adequate in North West
Europe but in other regions gaps are noted. The subset of
urban stations is insufficient to estimate the exposure
of the population living in cities with more than 25 000
inhabitants: the urban stations cover at most 30% of the
urban population.
- The threshold value set for the
protection of human health is exceeded substantially and
in all Member States. The subset of urban stations is
assumed to give representative values for the exposure of
an urban population of c. 58 million people. 78%
of this population is exposed to ozone levels exceeding
the threshold during at least one day; 9% is exposed to
exceedances during more than 50 days. On the average the
EU city population is exposed to concentrations above the
threshold during 1-2 consecutive days. Maximum episode
lengths of 5-8 days have been reported.
- The threshold value of daily average
concentrations set for the protection of vegetation is
exceeded substantially (by up to a factor 3), widely (in
all reporting Member States) and frequently (several
Member States report exceedances during more than 150
days at some of their stations). In less than 1% of the
area for which the subset of rural stations report
representative values, this threshold value is not
exceeded; exceedances during more than 150 days are
estimated for more than 27% of the area.
The threshold value of hourly average
concentrations is exceeded largely and widely (reported by 14
Member States) on a limited number of days: in 13% of the mapped
area exceedances during more than 5 days are reported.
- The threshold value for providing
information to the population has been exceeded in
allmost all EU Member States during a limited number of
days. Exceedance of the threshold value for warning of
the population has been reported from one station.
A limited presentation of the percentile
values observed in the period 1989-1995 is given for four Member
States for which this information was available. No significant
trend in percentile values has been observed in this seven year
period.
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