Abstract

The reduction of chemical pollution is a priority in many regional, national, and international policies, including in EU countries. To effectively do so, quantified overviews of pollutant emissions at national levels and with some granularity in their sources, are required. However, current monitoring efforts are often scattered and a quantitative and comprehensive inventory of toxic emissions in Europe is lacking. Toxic pollutants stem from a large variety of emission sources from industry, agriculture, households, etc. and the difficulty to cover all of them is manifest in public databases and official reports, where data gaps across countries and years exist for several substances. Here, we propose a methodology to tackle this problem and build comprehensive and harmonized national inventories of toxic pollutants. Using public databases, official reports, scientific literature and developing extrapolation techniques specific to each emission source, we derived harmonized annual inventories of toxic pollutants in all EU Member States over the years 2000–2014. They present an unprecedented coverage of 805, 572, and 468 substances emitted to air, water and soil, respectively. Although the resulting dataset shows a relatively good agreement with previous inventories of narrower scopes, uncertainties can be identified for specific emission sources and in the development of extrapolation techniques, thus calling for further research in these areas. Such efforts should also explore adaptation of the methodology to derive comprehensive inventories for countries outside EU, where data is scarcer. Nonetheless, the developed national inventories can provide a starting point for territorial chemical footprints of toxic pollutants and could be coupled with environmental impact assessment for gauging the damages to ecosystems and human health from toxic pollutants emitted in Europe. This can ultimately support policy-makers in their pollutants prioritisation and benchmarking across substances and countries towards improved toxic emission reduction policies.

Highlights

  • The United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals (UN SDGs) have raised again particular attention on environmental issues such as climate change and pollutant emissions (United Nations, 2015)

  • Toxic pollutants stem from a large variety of emission sources from industry, agriculture, households, etc. and the difficulty to cover all of them is manifest in public databases and official reports, where data gaps across countries and years exist for several substances

  • The final inventories cover most of the substances listed under Aarhus protocol on persistent organic pollutants (100%), the European Union (EU) Water Framework Directive (91%), the guidelines of the World Health Organization (WHO) for drinking-water quality (58%) (EC, 2008; UN, 2010; WHO, 2017)

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Summary

Introduction

The United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals (UN SDGs) have raised again particular attention on environmental issues such as climate change and pollutant emissions (United Nations, 2015). The EU is implementing the UN SDGs by integrating them into the European policy framework and evaluating the progress of its Member States (EC, 2016). In this context, it becomes as important to assess the efforts aiming at decoupling the economic growth from the environmental impacts due to the economic activities (UNEP, 2011). It becomes as important to assess the efforts aiming at decoupling the economic growth from the environmental impacts due to the economic activities (UNEP, 2011) This is a key aspect for both the Europe 2020 strategy (EC, 2010a) and its flagship initiative “A resource-efficient Europe”

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