Title: Transport Greenhouse Gas Emissions
1Transport Greenhouse Gas Emissions
- A presentation to the Transport Economics Forum
- David Greig and Dr Yuan Chou
9 September 2008
2Presentation structure
- Introduction to the problem
- Data and modelling
- Alternative fuels
- Other options for reducing emissions per vehicle
kilometre - Options for reducing vehicle kilometres
- Result abatement cost curve
- Acknowledgements
- ACIL Tasman Chris Summerfield, Ken Willett
- King report (UK), AGO, IPCC, McKinsey, Covec
(NZ), IEA
3 4Total Transport sector emissions, by sub-sector,
1990-2005
5Projection of transport energy consumption by
region and mode
6Fuel use of light vehicle stock
7Fuel use of light vehicle sales
8Fuel economy and GHG emission standards
9Vehicle Ownership/ 1000 Persons
10Modal split for the cities represented in the
Millennium Cities Database for Sustainable
Transport by region
11Emissions reduction opportunities and cost by
sector
12 13Modelling methodology
- Used methodology from BTRE report 107 (2002,2005)
- Updated parameters from a variety of sources
- Method of deriving GHG from transport modes
- vehicles x average KM x L per KM x emissions
per L - Modelled the drivers of change in each of these
components
14The model
- Different policies affected drivers of emissions
in unique ways - Simplifying assumptions needed to model complex
policies in Excel - Little scope for reflecting the adaptability of
policies- - tended to be all or nothing
- instead of phased approaches and adaptive
management - Ballpark results only as good as the
underlying data and relationships
15Base year emissions by mode (2005)
16BAU forecasts of emissions
17Policy optionsAlternative fuels to reduce
transport GHG emissions
18Life-cycle emissions
Source adapted from King Review 2007
19Petrol
20Impact of vehicle technologies
Source King Review 2007
21Impact of vehicle technologies
Source www.fueleconomy.gov
22Diesel
23CO2 emissions petrol versus diesel cars
24CNG
25Relevant transport modes
- Because of limited distribution infrastructure,
CNG often used in - depot-based dedicated fleets (e.g. buses, taxis)
- heavy vehicles (e.g. forklifts)
- CNG being trialed in marine applications
- e.g. US Coast Guard vessels, Norwegian ferries,
small Dubai and Bangkok ferries, and cargo ships
in Thailand
26Environmental impact
- Relatively low tailpipe CO2 emissions
- Some fugitive loss of methane in production
- Life-cycle CO2-e emissions 23 lower than petrol
but higher than diesel - Other emissions
27Barriers to increased uptake
- Vehicle range
- Large and heavy storage tanks 4.5x more volume
than diesel - Cost of vehicle conversion (4,500)
- Previous government programs failed
- Lack investment in distribution infrastructure
28Synthetic fossil fuels
29Types of synthetic fuels
- Synthetic gasoline
- Synthetic kerosene (jet fuel)
- Synthetic diesel
- Methanol
- Dimethyl Ether (DME)
- Production process Gas-to-Liquid (GTL) and
Coal-to-Liquid (CTL)
30Barriers to increased uptake
- Capital costs
- per barrel/day capacity at GTL plant costs
US25-40K (and US80K at a CTL plant) compared
with US15K for conventional oil refinery (ABARE) - Production costs
- Distribution infrastructure (DME)
31Biofuels
32Environmental impact
- Life-cycle emissions of biofuels depend on
- Type of crop used
- Type and amount of energy embedded in fertiliser
- Resulting crop yield
- Emissions from fertiliser production
- Energy in gathering and transporting feedstock to
biorefinery - Energy intensity of the conversion process
- Alternative land uses
33 Cost competitiveness of biofuels
Source IEA 2006
34Ethanol
35First generation feedstocks
- Sugar
- Sugar cane
- Sugar beet
- Grain
- Wheat
- Barley
- Corn
- Sorghum
36 Variability in Australian feedstock production
and prices
Source ABARE
37Barriers to increased uptake
- Water and pesticide requirements
- Competition with food
- High costs need for government subsidies
- Refuelling infrastructure (for E85 and higher
blends)
38Biodiesel
39First generation feedstocks
- Vegetable oils, oilseeds soy, sunflower,
rapeseed - Other crops palm, coconut
- Waste frying oil
- Animal fats beef tallow, poultry fat, pork lard
- Environmental impact 49 to 87 lower lifecycle
GHG emissions than diesel
40Relevant transport modes
- Rail Virgin Voyager 2007 (B20)
- Maritime recreational boats, inland commercial
and ocean-going commercial ships, research
vessels - Aviation blended with kerosene, Virgin Atlantic
test flight (biofuel from babassu nuts and
coconut)
41 Environmental impact
- Life-cycle GHG emissions of biodiesel derived
from palm oil (compared to diesel)
Source CSIRO 2007
42Next-generation biofuels
43 Summary of 2nd generation biofuels
44 Next-generation ethanol
- Use of lignocellulosic feedstocks (inedible plant
fibres) crop residues e.g. wheat and rice straw,
corn stalks and leaves dedicated energy crops
(e.g. switchgrass) - much higher yields per hectare than sugar and
starch crops - may be grown in areas unsuitable for grains and
other food/feed crops - much lower energy and water use
45Biogas
46 Production
- Produced by anaerobic digestion or fermentation
of organic matter - Feedstock manure, sewerage sludge, municipal
solid waste, biodegradable waste etc. - Currently used primarily for heat or electricity
generation - Must be purified into natural gas for use as
transport fuel
47 Applicable transport modes
- Passenger vehicles
- Light and heavy commercial vehicles
- Buses
- Rail
- First biogas train commenced operations in Sweden
in 2005 - Currently cost 25 more to run than diesel trains
48 Barriers to increased uptake
- Vehicle cost
- In UK, biogas vans cost 15-25 more than
conventional vans - Retail price of biogas
- Swedish subsidy estimated at AUD 0.75 per litre
of petrol-equivalent - Distribution infrastructure
- Alternative use of biogas in electricity
generation
49Hydrogen
50 Applicable transport modes
- Passenger vehicles
- Rail developments in Canada, Japan, USA
- Maritime lower fuel mass advantage
- Aviation requires airframe redesign to
accommodate larger fuel volumes due to low energy
density
51 Production processes
- Electrolysis
- Natural gas reformation high GHG emissions
- Gasification of coal and biomass (requires CCS)
- Water-splitting by high-temperature heat
- Photo-electrolysis
- Biological processes
52 Fuel cell vehicles (FCV)
- FCVs convert stored chemical energy into
electrical energy without combustion - Fuel cell membrane with air on one side and
hydrogen on the other - As hydrogen passes through the membrane to
combine with oxygen in the air, an electrical
charge forms at the membrane and water is created
as a by-product - An electric motor then provides propulsion
53 FCV trials
- Public transport fleets
- WA fuel cell bus covered 260,000 km as part of
international trial involving 10 European cities
and Beijing - California Fuel Cell Partnership placed 87
light-duty FCVs and 5 FC buses since 2000 - US Department of Energy initiated
government/industry partnership for learning
demonstrations in 2004 - Cars Honda FCX Clarity, Chevrolet Equinox
54 Other approaches to harnessing hydrogen as a
transport fuel
- Hydrogen in internal combustion engine BMW
Hydrogen 7 - On-board reformers convert petrol, methanol,
naptha etc into hydrogen to be fed into fuel cell - Hythane blend of hydrogen and methane that takes
advantage of complimentary fuel characteristics
55 Barriers to increased uptake
- Immaturity of vehicle technologies
- High fuel production costs
- On-board storage
- Distribution and refuelling infrastructure
- Long-distance transportation pipelines and
trucks - Fuelling stations
56Electricity
57 Environmental impact
- CO2 emissions from electricity and hydrogen under
various UK grid mix scenarios (g/CO2/km)
Source King Review 2007
58 Electric vehicles
- Petrol/diesel-electric hybrids
- Parallel hybrid electric motor and ICE combine
to improve efficiency and boost power (electric
motor used at low speeds, and gives extra
acceleration at higher speeds) eg. Toyota Prius,
BMW/Mercedes/GM - Series hybrid ICE does not drive wheels
directly but runs at constant, optimal speed,
acting as a generator or range extender eg.
Chevrolet Volt - Full electric vehicles
59 Barriers to increased uptake
- Vehicle cost
- e.g. Toyota Prius (hybrid), Tesla Roadster (pure
electric) - Limited range
- Improved with lithium-ion batteries in place of
nickel-metal-hydride batteries - Recharging infrastructure
60- Non-fuel policy options
- Reducing emissions per vehicle km
- Reducing kilometres per vehicle
61Policies - other options for reducing emissions
per vehicle km (1) cars
- Change to car fleet composition
- Customs duties car industry subsidies
- Fuel efficiency standards
- Car accessories
- Eco driving
- Enhanced vehicle inspections/maintenance
- Much higher fuel prices
62Policies - other options for reducing emissions
per vehicle km (2) freight
- Improved truck design, increased loads
- Increased rail freight efficiency
- Shift of freight from road to rail
63Policies options for reducing vehicle
kilometres (1) mode switch
- Personalised journey planning
- Walking and cycling
- Good public transport
- Park and ride
- More flexible taxis/jitneys
64Policies options for reducing vehicle
kilometres (2) charging
- Road congestion pricing
- Road externality charging
- Distance based insurance charges
- Tighter fringe benefit tax rules
65Policies options for reducing vehicle
kilometres (3) pooling (4) other
- Parking policies
- Vehicle sharing
- Flexible working, telecommuting
- Increased urban density
- Aviation taxes
66 67Important points
- These marginal cost are all stand-alone
- interaction effects need to be modelled
- Portfolios of schemes need to be designed which
take account of interactions - Timing of schemes could be varied to maximise
impact, maximise option value - Several negative marginal cost projects suggest
extensive market failures
68Road vehicle response to policies
69Portfolio approach With policies emissions by
mode
70Important points
- These marginal cost are all stand-alone
- interaction effects need to be modelled
- Portfolios of schemes need to be designed which
take account of interactions - Timing of schemes could be varied to maximise
impact, maximise option value - Several negative marginal cost projects suggest
extensive market failures
71