PARTICULATE MATTER (PM10) EMISSIONS: TREND AND SECTORAL DISAGGREGATION

    Panel 1
    Update date
    Authors

    Daniela Romano

    Abstract
    Graph
    Abstract

    This indicator represents the trend of national particulate matter (PM10) emissions by source sector from 1990 to 2023, showing an overall marked reduction over the years (-42.9%). The road transport sector, which accounted for 9.8% of total emissions in 2023, shows a reduction of 67.8% over the entire period. Emissions from non-industrial combustion increased by about 33.7% over the same period, representing in 2023 the most significant sector with a 45.9% share of total emissions.

    Description

    Particulate matter with a diameter smaller than 10 µm originates from both natural and anthropogenic sources. Natural sources include soil erosion, sea spray, biogenic aerosol production (plant fragments, pollen, spores), volcanic emissions, and long-range transport of desert dust. A significant portion of atmospheric particulate matter has a secondary origin, resulting from reactions involving gaseous compounds such as nitrogen oxides, sulfur oxides, ammonia, and organic compounds. In addition, particulate matter contains substances such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) and heavy metals. Fine particles, particularly in their smaller size fractions, have considerable health relevance due to their high capacity to penetrate the respiratory system. The estimates presented refer only to primary emissions and do not include secondary particulate formation or emissions resulting from the resuspension of dust deposited on the ground.

    Purpose

    The purpose is to assess the temporal trend of PM10 emissions (particles with a diameter smaller than 10 µm) disaggregated by sector, which is relevant for monitoring the effectiveness of emission reduction regulations, with particular attention to urban areas.

    Policy relevance and utility for users
    It is of national scope or applicable to environmental issues at the regional level but of national significance.
    It is able to describe the trend without necessarily providing an evaluation of it.
    It is simple and easy to interpret.
    It is sensitive to changes occurring in the environment and/or human activities
    It provides a representative overview of environmental conditions, environmental pressures, and societal responses.
    It provides a basis for international comparisons
    Analytical soundness
    Be based on international standards and international consensus about its validity;
    Be theoretically well founded in technical and scientific terms
    Presents reliability and validity of measurement and data collection methods
    Temporal comparability
    Spatial comparability
    Measurability (data)
    Adequately documented and of known quality
    Updated at regular intervals in accordance with reliable procedures
    Readily available or made available at a reasonable cost/benefit ratio
    An “adequate” spatial coverage
    An “appropriate” temporal coverage
    Main regulatory references and objectives

    Convention on Long-Range Transboundary Air Pollution (CLRTAP, 1979)
    Presidential Decree (DPR) 203/88
    Ministerial Decree (DM) of 12 July 1990
    Legislative Decree No. 152/2006
    Legislative Decree No. 128/2010
    Legislative Decree No. 46/2014
    Directive (EU) 2015/2193
    Directive 2010/75/EU
    Regulation (EC) 715/2007
    Regulation (EC) 595/2009

    As a Party to the UNECE Convention on Long-Range Transboundary Air Pollution (CLRTAP), Italy is required to annually update and report the national atmospheric emission inventory, which includes PM10 among other pollutants.
    In the energy and industrial sectors, DPR 203/88 establishes authorization requirements for plants, while the Ministerial Decree of 12 July 1990 introduces emission limits for industrial installations.
    The main national legislative reference for air protection and emission reduction is Legislative Decree 3 April 2006, No. 152 (“Environmental Regulations”, Part V). The Decree was subsequently updated by Legislative Decree No. 128/2010 and further amended following the entry into force of Legislative Decree No. 46 of 4 March 2014.
    Several regulations impose limits on dust emissions in specific sectors, particularly road transport and industry. For stationary sources, Directive 2010/75/EU establishes particulate emission limit values for solid, liquid, and gaseous fuels used in large combustion plants. For medium combustion plants, Directive (EU) 2015/2193 sets rules for controlling emissions of dust into the air, in order to reduce potential risks to human health and the environment.
    For mobile sources, the most recent provisions concerning particulate matter emissions derive from Regulation (EC) 715/2007 on type approval of motor vehicles with respect to emissions from passenger cars and light commercial vehicles (Euro 5 and Euro 6 standards) and Regulation (EC) 595/2009 on type approval of motor vehicles and engines with respect to emissions from heavy-duty vehicles (Euro VI standard).
     

    DPSIR
    Pressure
    Indicator type
    Descriptive (A)
    References

    ISPRA, 2022. The provincial-level disaggregation of the national emissions inventory. Available at http://www. isprambiente. gov. it/it/pubblicazioni/rapporti. Reports 369/2022.

    ISPRA, 2025. Italian Emission Inventory 1990-2023. Informative Inventory Report 2025. (https://www. isprambiente. gov. it/it/pubblicazioni/rapporti; https://www. ceip. at/status-of-reporting-and-review-results/2025-submission).

    Data collection frequency
    Yearly
    Data availabilty

    Used ISPRA data from the National Inventory of Atmospheric Emissions (http://emissioni. sina. isprambiente. it/interno-nazionale/).

    Spatial coverage

    National

    Time coverage

    1990-2023

    Processing methodology

    The estimate is calculated as part of the development of the national atmospheric emission inventory. For air pollutants, the methodology applied is that indicated by the European Environment Agency (EMEP/EEA Air Pollutant Emission Inventory Guidebook 2019).
    For a detailed description of the estimation methodology, reference is made to the Informative Inventory Report – IIR (https://www.isprambiente.gov.it/it/pubblicazioni/rapporti/; https://www.ceip.at/status-of-reporting-and-review-results/2025-submission).
     

    Update frequency
    Year
    Data quality

    The emission data reported represent the official reference source for verifying Italy’s compliance with international commitments, given ISPRA’s role as the body responsible for the annual compilation of the National Emission Inventory. Data estimates are calculated in accordance with the transparency, accuracy, consistency, comparability, and completeness principles required by the reference methodology. Further improvements may derive from the identification of potential emission sources not yet included in the estimation methodology.
     

    Status
    Good
    Trend
    Positive
    State assessment/description

    In 2023, PM10 emission levels amounted to approximately 198 kt, showing a reduction of about 2% compared to 2022.
    This decrease is mainly attributable to emissions from non-industrial combustion, which account for 46% of total PM10 emissions and decreased by 3% over the same period, also due to favourable climatic conditions.
    A “positive” evaluation is therefore assigned (Table 1).
     

    Trend assessment/description

    National PM10 emissions decreased by 42.9% over the period 1990–2023, showing a positive trend from an environmental standpoint (Table 1).

    Comments

    National emissions are calculated in accordance with the estimation methodology adopted at the European level and described in the EMEP/EEA Air Pollutant Emission Inventory Guidebook – 2019.
    Natural sources (other emission sources and sinks) are excluded from the total, consistent with the classification used in the estimation of the national emission inventory. Between 1990 and 2023, the road transport sector recorded a 67.8% decrease and contributed about 10% to total emissions in 2023. Emissions from non-industrial combustion increased by 33.7%, representing in 2023 the most significant sector with a 45.9% share of total emissions. Other combustion processes recorded significant decreases in particulate emissions.
    In particular, emissions from combustion for energy production and transformation industries decreased by 98.9%, accounting for only 0.2% of total emissions in 2023, compared to an average share of over 12% until 1995.
    Emissions from combustion processes in manufacturing industries decreased by 74.7%, reaching a share of 3.5% of the total in 2023. Reductions observed in the energy and industrial sectors are mainly due to the introduction of two regulatory instruments: - Presidential Decree 203/88, establishing authorization rules for plants, and -Ministerial Decree of 12 July 1990, introducing emission limits for industrial facilities. In 2023, emissions from agricultural activities, production processes, and other mobile sources accounted respectively for 10.7%, 19.1%, and 3.9% of the total, with reductions since 1990 of -34.7%, -46.2%, and -75.7%. Emissions related to waste treatment and disposal increased by 19.1% compared to 1990, reaching a share of 2.9% of total emissions in 2023 (Table 1, Figure 1).
     

    Data
    File
    Headline

    Table 1: National PM10 emissions by source sector

    Data source

    ISPRA

    Data legend

    A: Combustion in energy production and transformation industries
    B: Non-industrial combustion
    C: Industrial combustion
    D: Production processes
    E: Extraction and distribution of fossil fuels / geothermal energy
    F: Use of solvents
    G: Road transport
    H: Other mobile sources
    I: Waste treatment and disposal
    L: Agriculture

    Note

    Emission values have been updated in line with the annual update of the national emission inventory.

    Immagine
    Headline

    Figure 1: National PM10 emissions by source sector

    Data source

    ISPRA

    Note

    Emission values have been updated in line with the annual update of the national emission inventory.

    Graph
    English