KAZALCI OKOLJA

This indicator shows total consumption of ozone-depleting substances, expressed as values recalculated in accordance with the ozone-depleting potential (ODP) in tonnes per year. In methodological terms, the indicator is based on the standard issued by the European Environment Agency (IFC 4.1.b) – Consumption of ozone-depleting substances.


Charts

Figure PB02-1: Total consumption of ozone-depleting substances in Slovenia (CFC, CTC, MCF, total halons, HCFC and methyl bromide). The quantities of substances expressed in tonnes are weighted in accordance with their ozone-depleting potentials (ODP).
Sources:

Records provided by the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Slovenia (for 1989); Statistical Yearbook RS, Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia (data for 1995); Annual reports for the Montreal Protocol Secretariat and Database for Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer, Environmental Agency of the Republic of Slovenia, 2005 (data for the period 1997-2004);

Show data
1989 1995 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004
CFC,CTC, MCF total ODP (t) 2509.4 403.2 0.5 0.1 0.1 0.5 2.8 0.5 0.8 0.7
halons total ODP (t) 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0
HFCF total ODP (t) 1.1 16.2 8.6 7.2 5.9 7.3 6.6 6 5.7 3.4
methyl bromide ODP (t) 0 0.6 0.1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
total ODP (t) 2510.5 420 9.2 7.4 6 7.8 10.4 6.5 6.5 4.1

Slovenia does not produce ozone-depleting substances and from the beginning of 1998, the first enacted regulation covered prohibitions and restrictions with respect to the management of ozone-depleting substances in production, imports, exports, entry into circulation, as well as the use of substances and products whose air emissions deplete the ozone layer. Throughout the world, consumption of ozone-depleting substances is falling dramatically as a result of both international agreements and the changing attitude of individual countries. The trend of abandoning consumption is also made clearly evident by the consumption indicator for Slovenia.

With the adoption of Rules on the Management of Ozone-Depleting Substances (OJ RS, No 62/03) and Rules on the Management of Waste Ozone-Depleting Substances (OJ RS, No 42/03) in 2003, Slovenia brought its domestic regulations in line with the European legislation (Regulation (EC) No 2037/2000 on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer). The provisions of the second regulation govern the area of the management of waste ozone-depleting substances, with a view to ban air emissions of these substances from products, equipment and installations during the process of maintenance or dismantling, as well as recovery, reuse and disposal of such substances.


Methodology

On the basis of annual reports made by liable persons according to current regulations, the EARS has maintained a database in recent years. A liable person is a client that has been issued a decision concerning annual imports and, at the same time, authorisation for each individual import of substances. Each year, liable persons are required to report to the EARS (MESPE) on the actual consumption of substances for the previous year. As the data are based on client reporting, cross-checking with other competent authorities (e.g. customs authorities) and the data collected by inspection services is useful for the purposes of verifying their accuracy. The processing of data provides an appropriate overview for comparison between the data collected by respective competent authorities as well as a basis for reporting to the UNEP Secretariat pursuant to the provisions of the Montreal Protocol. The data may be aggregated by type of consumed ozone-depleting substances (authorisations and reports) and recalculated into ODP tonnes (recalculated quantity in accordance with the ozone-depleting potential factor).

The data for 1989 are taken from the records kept at the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Slovenia (Report on the State of the Environment 1995) – the only available data are those on total quantities of CFC, MFC, HCFC; there are no data concerning individual substances. For 1995, the data are taken from the Annual Yearbook RS (Statistical Office of the Republic of Slovenia). For the period 1997-2002, the data derive from annual reports communicated to the UNEP and prepared by the EARS on the basis of data from the above mentioned database.

It is impossible to draw a quantitative comparison with other countries, since each country’s index derives from the quantities in the base year and thereafter reduces consumption according to the recalculation of percentage shares of base quantities. The base year for Slovenia is 1986.


Related indicators