In 2022, agriculture accounted for 97.5% of total ammonia emissions. From 1990 to 2023, ammonia emissions in Slovenian agriculture decreased by 31.8% and by 15.6% since 2005. Slovenian agriculture is achieving the overall emissions target set out in the NEC Directive (a gradual reduction of at least 15% by 2030 compared to 2005).
The indicator shows ammonia emissions in agriculture. The main sources of emissions and their changes between 1990 and 2023 are presented. The trend of emissions in the EU–27 countries is also presented.
SOURCE: SEA, 2024; AIS 2024
Agriculture[t/year] | Other sources[t/year] | Total[t/year] | Share of agriculture in total emissions[%] | Share of other sources in total emissions[%] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2022 | 15748.46 | 404.76 | 16153.23 | 97.49 | 2.51 |
SOURCE: AIS, 2025
Emissions from animal houses[t/year] | Emissions from manure management[t/year] | Emissions due to fertilization with livestock manures and grazing[t/year] | Emissions due to fertilization with mineral fertilizers [t/year] | Emissions due to fertilization with other organic fertilizers [t/year] | Emissions from animal houses[%] | Emissions from manure management[%] | Emissions due to fertilization with livestock manures and grazing[%] | Emissions due to fertilization with mineral fertilizers [%] | Emissions due to fertilization with other organic fertilizers [%] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2023 | 4473.52 | 2255.38 | 6633.31 | 1301.34 | 61.10 | 30.38 | 15.32 | 45.05 | 8.84 | 0.41 |
SOURCE: AIS, 2025
1990[t] | 2005[t] | 2023[t] | Changes in annual ammonia emissions 1990-2023[Index (1990=100)] | Share in total emissons 2023[%] | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
From animal houses – cattle | 3802.56 | 3207.53 | 3197.70 | 84.09 | 21.72 |
From animal houses – pigs | 1687.90 | 1447.94 | 542.85 | 32.16 | 3.69 |
From animal houses – poultry | 903.34 | 385.73 | 543.80 | 60.20 | 3.69 |
From animal houses – sheep, goats, horses, rabbits | 107.94 | 214.85 | 189.17 | 175.25 | 1.28 |
Manure storage – cattle | 2023.44 | 1648.29 | 1609.48 | 79.54 | 10.93 |
Manure storage – pigs | 2026.97 | 829.11 | 176.61 | 8.71 | 1.20 |
Manure storage – poultry | 462.76 | 186.43 | 309.99 | 66.99 | 2.11 |
Manure storage – sheep, goats, horses, rabbits | 94.24 | 185.04 | 159.30 | 169.04 | 1.08 |
Fertilization – animal manures and grazing | 8994.22 | 7608.67 | 6633.31 | 73.75 | 45.05 |
Fertilization – mineral fertilizers | 1472.94 | 1729.71 | 1301.34 | 88.35 | 8.84 |
Fertilization – other organic ferztilizers | 14.35 | 4.57 | 61.10 | 425.72 | 0.41 |
Animal production (total) | 11109.14 | 8104.91 | 6728.91 | 60.57 | 45.70 |
Plant production (total) | 10481.51 | 9342.95 | 7995.74 | 76.28 | 54.30 |
Agriculture (animal production and plant production together) | 21590.64 | 17447.86 | 14724.65 | 68.20 | 100 |
SOURCE: EEA, 2024
Annual ammonia emisssions[Index (1990=100)] | Ammonia emissions – 1990[000 t] | Ammonia emissions – 2022[000 t] | |
---|---|---|---|
Ireland | 110.79 | 115.36 | 127.81 |
Cyprus | 100.83 | 7.47 | 7.53 |
Austria | 89.93 | 71.42 | 64.23 |
Luxembourg | 89.61 | 6.35 | 5.69 |
Spain | 89.45 | 472.80 | 422.90 |
Portugal | 87.91 | 57.57 | 50.61 |
Sweden | 84.77 | 54.33 | 46.06 |
France | 76.49 | 635.60 | 486.20 |
Finland | 73.79 | 37.95 | 28.00 |
Slovenia | 73.64 | 21.39 | 15.75 |
Germany | 68.09 | 689.20 | 469.30 |
Malta | 64.52 | 2.27 | 1.46 |
Greece | 64.32 | 91.01 | 58.54 |
Italy | 63.47 | 499.90 | 317.30 |
EU27 | 63.39 | 4.82 | 3.06 |
Croatia | 56.47 | 44.89 | 25.35 |
Hungary | 56.07 | 138.07 | 77.42 |
Poland | 54.30 | 488.60 | 265.30 |
Czechia | 52.44 | 142.80 | 74.89 |
Belgium | 50.05 | 121.63 | 60.88 |
Denmark | 45.04 | 156.85 | 70.64 |
Romania | 44.98 | 298.80 | 134.40 |
Estonia | 44.74 | 21.21 | 9.49 |
Lithuania | 44.24 | 81.13 | 35.89 |
Slovakia | 40.67 | 56.72 | 23.07 |
Latvia | 40.48 | 31.40 | 12.71 |
Bulgaria | 39.82 | 142.55 | 56.77 |
Netherlands | 32.68 | 336.60 | 110 |
In high concentrations, ammonia directly harms the health and well-being of humans and livestock. It is also harmful to plants. Of greatest concern, however, are its indirect effects. It is a precursor to particulate matter, which causes respiratory and cardiovascular disease. With ammonia, nitrogen is deposited in natural ecosystems, altering them (eutrophication) and threatening biodiversity. Ammonia emissions also cause economic damage through losses of plant-available nitrogen. Nitrous oxide is also emitted into the environment through the deposition of ammonia. In this way, it contributes to indirect greenhouse gas emissions.
Agriculture is the largest contributor to all ammonia emissions in Slovenia (97.5%). The largest share of ammonia in agriculture is emitted from the application of livestock manure, including grazing (45.0%), followed by emissions from animal houses (30.4%), emissions from the storage of livestock manure (15.3%) and emissions from the application of mineral fertilizers (8.8%). The high emissions from the application of liquid manure are partly due to the fact that farmers still predominantly use tankers with discharge nozzles and splash plates, which are characterized by high emissions.
Over the period from 1990 to 2023, annual ammonia emissions from agriculture decreased from 21,591 to 14,725 tonnes, or by 31,8%. The decrease in emissions was also significant for the period after 2005 (–15.6%), the base year for Slovenia's new ammonia emission commitments. The decrease was at the level of the EU–27 average. Throughout the period, the largest absolute decrease in emissions was in pig farming, followed by fertilization of agricultural plants with livestock manure, cattle production and poultry production. The large relative increase in emissions from small ruminants and horses is insignificant in absolute terms, as these emissions account only about 2% of total agricultural emissions.
The decrease in ammonia emissions is also due to regulations designed to protect water. In particular, it is the Decree on the Protection of Waters against Pollution by Nitrates from Agricultural Sources (UL RS, No. 113/09, 5/13, 22/15, 12/17 and 44/22) that sets the maximum permissible livestock density and restricts the use of nitrogen fertilizers on agricultural land. The Agricultural-Environmental-Climate Payments (KOPOP) and the Organic Farming measure from Rural Development Program 2014-2020 (with extension to 2022) also contributed to emission reduction. These measures include requirements that contribute to more efficient use of nitrogen in agriculture. In 2015, KOPOP introduced for the first time financial support for the implementation of fertilization with low ammonia emissions to air. The measure requires band application of slurry or its injection into the soil. The measures are be continued to a greater extent as part of the Strategic Plan of the Common Agricultural Policy 2023-2027. In 2020, the Ministry of the Environment and Spatial Planning funded the publication of the Advisory Code of Good Agricultural Practices for Reducing Ammonia Emissions (Verbič, 2020).