Title: Centralised and national submissions of transport emissions
1Centralised and national submissions of transport
emissions
Vienna, May 11, 2009
- Giorgos MelliosThomas PapageorgiouLeon
Ntziachristos - EEA project manager Martin Adams
Study funded by EEA in the framework of the
ETC/ACC IP2009 undertaken by LAT/AUTh
LABORATORY OF APPLIED THERMODYNAMICS
ARISTOTLE UNIVERSITY THESSALONIKI
2Outline
- Background
- Objectives
- Methodology
- Discussion
- Outlook
3Background Centralised calculations
- European policy is mostly based on centralised
tools to calculate emissions and for projections - The TREMOVE model is used in transport
projections and to perform impact assessments
(Euro 56, Euro VI, CO2cars, ) - TREMOVE estimates demand based on cost of
transportation and uses COPERT to calculate
emissions - Several of the TERM indicators for environmental
assessment are produced on the basis of models
(such as TREMOVE) - e.g. TERM 28 on specific emissions of air
pollutants, TERM 33 on the average age of vehicle
fleet
4Background Data sources and usage
- In 2008, EC (DG ENV) collected and produced
streamlined road stock and activity data for all
EU27 MSs (CH, HR, NO, TR) to feed COPERT and
TREMOVE (FLEETS project) - Base year 2005
- Historic years Mostly back to 1995 (some
countries already starting 1970) - EC (DG ENV) will base transport projections to
2030 on these data - TREMOVE for impact assessments
- EC4MACS (GAINS, PRIMES) for integrated assessment
5Background Centralised vs. national
6Objectives
- Compare centrally calculated and national
submissions of transport emissions, with emphasis
on road transport - To check whether centralised calculations are
consistent with national data - QC to identify (and explain) cases where national
data exhibit unusual departures from centrally
calculated emissions
7Methodology National submissions
- For main pollutants (CO, VOC, NOx, PM) emission
data officially submitted to CLRTAP - For CO2 emission data officially submitted to
UNFCCC - Data collected for EEA30 countries (except
Iceland and Liechtenstein), years 2000 and 2005 - Aggregated and sectoral (except CO2) data
available for most countries
8Methodology Centralised calculations
- Transport activity data from the FLEETS database
(vehicle stock, mileage, speeds, shares, etc.) - Data obtained from international sources
(Eurostat, ACEA, ) and national data (experts,
projects) - Data collected for EEA30 countries (except
Iceland and Liechtenstein) and for years 2000 and
2005 - Calculations performed with COPERT 4 (v6.1) to
estimate pollutant and CO2 emissions - Mileage adjusted to match national fuel use
statistics (from UNFCCC submissions) - Bias to be introduced if UNFCCC and CLRTAP
equivalent fuel consumptions differ
9Results Emissions comparison
- Preliminary results only shown in this
presentation - Total emissions (kt)
- Indicators (g/kg fuel)
10Results Total emissions (kt)
11Results Indicators (g/kg fuel)
12Results CO Indicators
Increasing National CO
13Results Classification of CO deviations
14Results ?Ox Indicators
Increasing National NOx
15Results Classification of NOx deviations
16Results More details available
- Excel spreadsheets provide more information on
individual vehicle classes - Italy CO Austria - CO
17Discussion
- CO2 emissions in good agreement due to mileage
tuning - Fair agreement for other pollutants at an
aggregated level no bias - Differences increase when looking in more detail
- Country level
- Sector level
- Centralised NOx emissions somewhat higher due to
higher HDV EF in Copert 4 than Copert 3 - Exercise appears useful to and may be used to
improve/better understand data
18Outlook
- Draft report under preparation to disseminate to
parties for commenting (due end of May) - Rerun calculations with 2008 national submissions
- Prepare final report, including country
comments/corrections by October 2009
19- Thank you for your attention!
- looking forward to fruitful collaboration!