N stands for Normal. This applies to gas flow meters and it means that the volume is given at normal pressure and normal temperature - even if the gas in the meter is at high pressure and temperature.
As has been discussed at length in other fora (see Piping & Fluid Mechanics Engineering for example), reporting gas at "Normal" or "Standard" volume flow rates allows a set of volumetric units to stand-in for a set of mass flow units (which are not pressure and temperature dependent). It is important to realize that this is simply a reporting tool - the parameters that go into inferring gas-flow from a differential pressure will result in a a flow rate at actual conditions that can then be converted to a simulated flow rate that the stream would have if it was flowing at standard conditions.
I'll never understand why people require gas to be presented in volume-flow-rate units, but they do and the STP representation is far more effective than asking people to convert actual flow rates at a variety of pressures and temperatures to a common set of conditions for aggregation.