Title: RAINS%20review%202004
1RAINS review 2004
The RAINS model The approach
2Cost-effectiveness needs integration
- Economic/energy development (projections)
- State of emission controls, available
technologies, costs - Atmospheric processes
- Environmental sensitivities
3The RAINS modelScenario analysis mode
Energy/agriculture projections
Driving forces
Emission control options
Emissions
Costs
Atmospheric dispersion
4A multi-pollutant/multi-effect framework
Primary PM
Health impacts- PM ?
Health impacts- PM ?
SO2 NOx VOC NH3
? ? ? ?
via secondary aerosols via secondary aerosols via secondary aerosols via secondary aerosols
Acidification ? ? ?
Eutrophication ? ?
- Ozone ? ?
Vegetation damage - Ozone ? ?
5RAINS A modular approach
Environmental impacts
6Integrated assessment in CAFE with the RAINS
model
Energy/agriculture projections
Driving forces
Emission control options
Emissions
Costs
Atmospheric dispersion
Environmental targets
Health and environmental impacts
7Per-capita costs Scenario H1
8Uniform or effect-based scenarios?
9Cost-effectiveness vs. cost-benefit
- Cost-effectiveness
- Find least-cost solution to achieve exogenously
given environmental policy targets. - Decision makers set targets and decide about
appropriate balance with costs - Cost-benefit analysis
- The optimal balance between costs and measures is
internalized by the model. - No room for exogenous decision maker.
- Consensus on quantification of benefits required.
10The cost-effectiveness approach
Models help to separate policy and technical
issues
Decision makers
Decide about Ambition level (environmental targets) Level of acceptable risk Willingness to pay
Models
Identify cost-effective and robust measures Balance controls over different countries, sectors and pollutants Regional differences in Europe Side-effects of present policies Maximize synergies with other air quality problems Search for robust strategies
11System boundaries
- Driving forces of air pollution (energy use,
transport, agriculture) - are driven by other issues, and
- have impacts on other issues too.
- Critical boundaries
- Greenhouse gas emissions and climate change
policies - Agricultural policies
- Other air pollution impacts on water and soil
(nitrogen deposition over seas, nitrate in
groundwater, etc.) - Quantification of AP effects where scientific
basis is not robust enough
12- Interactions between emission controls for air
pollution and greenhouse gases - A sneak preview of the RAINS extension to GHGs
13Reference case (REF)
- Pre-Kyoto energy projections for 2020
- Air pollution control according to recent EU
legislation (NEC Directive, LCP Directive,
Auto-Oil, etc.)
14Scenario 1
- CO2 control in the power sector
- Cost-effective measures to reduce CO2 emissions
in the power sector by 15 - Subject to exogenous electricity demand
- Recent EU legislation for air pollutants
15CO2 reduction measures applied in Scenario 1
16Changes in emissionscompared to REF, EU-23
CO2Mt
SO2kt
PM2.5kt
NOxkt
Netherlands total emissions (grey) are shown for
reference
17Emission control costs(billion /yr, compared to
REF)
Control of Scenario 1 Scenario 1
CO2 3.5
CH4 0
GHGs 3.5
SO2 -1.4
NOx -0.3
PM -0.6
Air pollutants -2.3
Total 1.2
18Differences in premature deaths (cases/year,
compared to REF)
19Scenario 2
- Multi-GHG control
- In each country, the equivalent CO2 reductions
of Scenario 1 are achieved with CO2 and CH4
controls - Recent EU legislation for air pollutants
20CO2 reduction measures applied in Scenarios 1
and 2
21CH4 reduction measures applied in Scenario 2
22Changes in emissionscompared to REF, EU-23
CO2Mt
SO2kt
CH4
PM2.5kt
NOxkt
Netherlands total emissions (black) are shown
for reference
23Emission control costs(billion /yr, compared to
REF)
Control of Scenario 1 Scenario 1 Scenario 2 Scenario 2
CO2 3.5 2.1
CH4 0 -1.2
GHGs 3.5 0.9
SO2 -1.4 -1.2
NOx -0.3 -0.2
PM -0.6 -0.4
Air pollutants -2.3 -1.8
Total 1.2 -0.9
24Scenario 3
- Increased biomass use in households
- Shift to biomass use for domestic heating10 of
light fuel oil is replaced by biomass
25Changes in emissionscompared to REF, EU-23
CO2Mt
SO2kt
CH4
PM2.5kt
NOxkt
Netherlands total emissions (black) are shown
for reference
26Differences in premature deaths(cases/year,
compared to REF)