EU action on air pollution is insufficient, say auditors

Is the EU doing enough to combat air pollution? A recent report by the European Court of Auditors concludes with a clear “No”. EU action to protect human health from air pollution has neither delivered the expected impact nor have the significant costs of air pollution been reflected in adequate action.

“Air pollution is the biggest environmental risk to health in the European Union,” said Janusz Wojciechowski, the member of the European Court of Auditors responsible for the report. “In recent decades, EU policies have contributed to emission reductions, but air quality has not improved at the same rate and there are still considerable impacts on public health.”

The report examined the design and implementation of the 2008 Ambient Air Quality Directive which set air quality standards for the concentrations of pollutants in the air we breathe. The auditors find that air quality limits in the EU are much weaker than the WHO guidelines and recent scientific evidence for most pollutants. For the most harmful air pollutant (PM2.5), the EU only specifies an annual average limit value. This means that high and harmful PM2.5 emissions from household heating during the winter are offset by lower summer levels.

Despite these high limit values, the auditors also find that most EU member states (excluding Estonia, Ireland, Cyprus, Latvia, Lithuania and Malta) still had illegal levels of air pollution. In addition, local air quality monitoring stations are not necessarily located near important sources of air pollution such as major industries or main urban traffic routes. That might make it easier to comply with the Directive, states the report.

Whenever the limit value are exceeded, member states need to produce Air Quality Plans to deal with the problem; however, the auditors found that these lengthy documents are often insufficiently targeted at the main pollution sources, had unclear cost implications and shied away from difficult political decisions.

To improve EU air quality, the auditors recommend that:

  • the European Commission should take more effective action;
  • the Ambient Air Quality Directive should be updated;
  • air quality policy should be prioritised and mainstreamed into other EU policies;
  • public awareness and information should be improved.

Every year, air pollution causes about 400,000 premature deaths in the EU and hundreds of billions of euros in health-related external costs. However, these significant human and economic costs have not yet been reflected in adequate action across the Union, warn the auditors. They add that particulate matter, nitrogen dioxide and ground level ozone are the air pollutants responsible for most of the early deaths and that people in urban areas are particularly exposed.

Interested in reading more? You can find the report “Air pollution: Our health still insufficiently protected” here.

[1] The task of European Court of Auditors is to check whether EU funds are correctly raised, spent, achieve value for money and are accounted for. As an independent EU agency, it does not have the power to change laws, but it can issue recommendations in its reports.

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Do you want to measure air quality where you live? Have you thought about building your own air quality sensor, but found it too much hassle to get the materials and handle the tech?

We’re proud to present the first ever plug-and-play hackAIR home sensor set!

Here is our offer: order a hackAIR air quality home sensor and receive all you need, already soldered, assembled AND pre-programmed for you.

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We have a limited amount of sensor sets and expect to sell out quickly. Make sure that you get your sensor – by ordering today.

 

Capabilities of the hackAIR home sensor

The hackAIR home sensor measures particulate matter concentrations (PM10 and PM2.5) using a low-cost sensor called SDS011. Every five minutes, you will be able to see a new measurement from your location on platform.hackair.eu – and you can compare it with other measurements from your neighbourhood (including from official air quality sensors). You can also download and analyse your measurements to get a sense of how air quality changes over time.

The hackAIR home sensor kit

We have purchased, assembled and programmed the main components for your hackAIR sensor. What you need to do is to add a sensor case (e.g. using an empty plastic bottle) and find a good spot for it within reach of your WiFi network (and a power cable).

You will also need to register your sensor on the hackAIR platform and connect it with your WiFi. You’ll be up and running in no time.

This is what you get in your package:

  • Air quality sensor: Nova PM SDS011
  • Microcontroller (Wemos D1 mini) with attached temperature and humidity sensor (DHT22)
  • All necessary jumper wires and a plastic tube to draw in air
  • Tutorial: How to set up your sensor
  • hackAIR sticker

What you need to add:

  • Micro-USB cable and USB charger (maybe a spare one from an old phone?)
  • A case to protect your hackAIR sensor from rain – this can be a yoghurt bucket or a PET bottle or plumbing pipe… Get creative! Find inspiration here
  • Access to electricity and WiFi to connect your sensor

You are ready to rock with this set!

And: let us know how it goes. If you need support, ask us. And: we are curious to see pictures of your sensor (+ cases). Share your images on social media and tag hackAIR!

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