10688_om_not-searchable
/en/natur-og-miljo/statistikker/milgiftn/arkiv
10688_om
statistikk
2009-02-09T10:00:00.000Z
Nature and the environment
en
false

Emissions to air of hazardous substances and particulate matter1990-2007

Content

About the statistics

Definitions

Name and topic

Name: Emissions to air of hazardous substances and particulate matter
Topic: Nature and the environment

Responsible division

Division for Energy and Environmental Statistics

Definitions of the main concepts and variables

The national emission model includes four dimensions:

Pollutants: The different gases/substances covered by the emission model

Technical emission sources: Stoves, ships, vehicles, flares, biological and industrial processes

Industry: Standard Industrial Classification (in Europe, called NACE)

Commodity: Different energy commodities; solid fuels (for example coal and coke), liquid fuels (diesel oil, petrol, kerosene, heavy oil etc.), gases (natural gas, landfill gas etc.), biofuel (for instance fuel wood, wood waste, pellets) and waste (hazardous waste and other waste). 

Heavy metals:

Lead (Pb)

Cadmium (Cd)

Mercury (Hg)

Cupper (Cu)

Chromium (Cr)

Other chemical elements:

Arsenic (As) 

Particulate matter:

TSP (Total Suspended Particles)

PM 10 (particles measuring less than 10 μm in diameter)

PM 2.5 (particles measuring less than 2.5 μm in diameter) 

POPs (Persistent Organic Pollutants):

PAH (Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons)

Dioxins 

Standard classifications

Published tables:

Emission by source

Emission by industry (NACE)

NAMEA (NACE according to Quarterly National Accounts)

Tables used in reports to UNECE/Long-Range Transboundary Air Pollutants.

Administrative information

Background

Production

Accuracy and reliability