Environment International (Apr 2019)

Impacts of air pollution on human and ecosystem health, and implications for the National Emission Ceilings Directive: Insights from Italy

  • Alessandra De Marco,
  • Chiara Proietti,
  • Alessandro Anav,
  • Luisella Ciancarella,
  • Ilaria D'Elia,
  • Silvano Fares,
  • Maria Francesca Fornasier,
  • Lina Fusaro,
  • Maurizio Gualtieri,
  • Fausto Manes,
  • Aldo Marchetto,
  • Mihaela Mircea,
  • Elena Paoletti,
  • Antonio Piersanti,
  • Michela Rogora,
  • Luca Salvati,
  • Elisabetta Salvatori,
  • Augusto Screpanti,
  • Giovanni Vialetto,
  • Marcello Vitale,
  • Cristina Leonardi

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 125
pp. 320 – 333

Abstract

Read online

Across the 28 EU member states there were nearly half a million premature deaths in 2015 as a result of exposure to PM2.5, O3 and NO2. To set the target for air quality levels and avoid negative impacts for human and ecosystems health, the National Emission Ceilings Directive (NECD, 2016/2284/EU) sets objectives for emission reduction for SO2, NOx, NMVOCs, NH3 and PM2.5 for each Member State as percentages of reduction to be reached in 2020 and 2030 compared to the emission levels into 2005. One of the innovations of NECD is Article 9, that mentions the issue of “monitoring air pollution impacts” on ecosystems. We provide a clear picture of what is available in term of monitoring network for air pollution impacts on Italian ecosystems, summarizing what has been done to control air pollution and its effects on different ecosystems in Italy. We provide an overview of the impacts of air pollution on health of the Italian population and evaluate opportunities and implementation of Article 9 in the Italian context, as a case study beneficial for all Member States. The results showed that SO42− deposition strongly decreased in all monitoring sites in Italy over the period 1999–2017, while NO3− and NH4+ decreased more slightly. As a consequence, most of the acid-sensitive sites which underwent acidification in the 1980s partially recovered. The O3 concentration at forest sites showed a decreasing trend. Consequently, AOT40 (the metric identified to protect vegetation from ozone pollution) showed a decrease, even if values were still above the limit for forest protection (5000 ppb h−1), while PODy (flux-based metric under discussion as new European legislative standard for forest protection) showed an increase. National scale studies pointed out that PM10 and NO2 induced about 58,000 premature deaths (year 2005), due to cardiovascular and respiratory diseases. The network identified for Italy contains a good number of monitoring sites (6 for terrestrial ecosystem monitoring, 4 for water bodies monitoring and 11 for ozone impact monitoring) distributed over the territory and will produce a high number of monitored parameters for the implementation of the NECD. Keywords: National Emission Ceilings Directive, Air pollution impacts, Climate change, Terrestrial ecosystem, Freshwater ecosystem, Human health