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Clean ambient air is one of the main components of a high-quality living environment and is very important for people's well-being. Ambient air is the outdoor air, which is a layer close to the ground. Air pollution is the presence of natural and man-made substances harmful to living organisms and the environment in the ambient air. The quality of the ambient air is mainly affected by industry, electricity and heat production, the use of chemicals and road, sea and air transport.

Overview


Air pollution is considered the greatest environmental hazard to human health today. It is estimated that in Europe, around the number of people equivalent to the population of Tallinn die prematurely each year due to air pollution. Therefore, it is very important to know about the quality of our ambient air and how our activities directly affect it.

Based on the results of the air pollutant emission inventory conducted by the Environment Agency, we know the amount of specific pollutants discharged into the air annually as a result of human activity. We receive a significant part of the data for this from the annual reports of companies who have an environmental protection permit. In addition, we take into account emissions from the use of fuels and solvents by households, the transport sector, agricultural land use and waste management.

Annual emissions data allow us to assess the achievement of the environmental protection goals set for Estonia.

One of the goals is to reduce the emissions of sulphur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, volatile organic compounds, ammonia and especially fine particles by 32%, 18%, 10%, 1% and 15%, respectively, compared to these emissions in 2005. The goals set for the member states of the European Union are part of the Clean Air Policy Package and so far we have remained within the permitted limits.

We can find out what our air quality is from the ambient air monitoring carried out within the national environmental monitoring framework.

See also


Air pollution and air quality
International methodologies
View real-time outdoor air quality
Odors and noise
Radiation
International organizations
Data sources
Legislation

Riiklikud seadused

Rahvusvahelised õigusaktid

 

Environmental indicators

See all on the topic Ambient air

Fine particle emissions

11.04.2023

Indikaator näitab paiksetest ja liikuvatest saasteallikatest õhku paisatud eriti peenete osakeste (PM2.5) aastaseid heitkoguseid tuhandetes tonnides ning aastateks 2020–2029 ja 2030 seatud vähendamise eesmärke võrreldes baasaastaga (2005) protsentides.

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Emissions from sources with environmental permits

Published by Environment Agency | 28.09.2022

From this page, you can find information on the annual emissions and fuel usage of stationary emission sources with environmental permits since 2019. The data on emissions can be filtered by year and county in the chart. In the data table below, you can filter by year, county, local government, operators, and used fuels.

 

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Emissions of air pollutants

Published by Environment Agency | 22.01.2022

Every year, ambient air experts prepare annual reviews of pollutant emissions and their trends from local and diffuse emission sources in the country. This page provides an overview of air pollutant emissions in Estonia.

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Published: 20.12.2021  /  Updated: 13.05.2025