Title: Emission projections for NEC Gases Irelands approach
1Emission projections for NEC Gases Irelands
approach
- Stephan Leinert, Bernard Hyde, Eimear Cotter
2Overview
- Introduction
- General approach
- Transport
- Agriculture
- Solvents
- Conclusions
3Approach to emissions projections for NEC gases
- Consistency with national energy forecast
- Consistency with GHG projections
- Consistency with inventories (e.g. emission
factors, car fleet mileage)
4Emissions
- Energy related
- Power generation
- Road transport
- Industrial combustion
- Residential
- Commercial Institutional Services
- Fuel use in agriculture
- Non-energy related
- Agriculture (NH3)
- Agriculture (NMVOC)
- Solvent emissions
- Storage and distribution of oil products
5Source categories for projections
6Energy Forecast Institutional/procedural
arangements
ESRI Economic and Social Research Institute
SEI Sustainable Energy Ireland
EPA Environmental Protection Agency
ESRI Macroeconomic Forecast
- EPA
- Disaggregate fuel data
- Apply emission factors
- gt NEC projections
SEI National Energy Forecasts
ESRI Energy Forecast
Policy assumptions
7Emission Scenarios
8Assumptions underpinning Energy Forecasts
- With Measures and
- With Additional Measures projections
- are both based on ESRI Credit Crunch Scenario
(2008). - Economic Shock
- is based on a sensitivity study on the With
Measures scenario, to give an indication of the
impact of a further contraction in the economy
9NOx inventories and projections
- Strong decrease in Powergen NOx emissions both
absolute and as fraction of total projected to
continue - Increase of Transport NOx emissons both absolute
and as fraction of total - Transport NOx emissions projected to decrease in
absolute terms will still be major contributing
sector
10Overview
- Introduction
- General approach
- Transport
- Agriculture
- Solvents
- Conclusions
11Road transport general approach
- Using COPERT 4, v6.1
- Input population, mileage etc
- Consistency with last years inventory e.g.
mileage and speeds - Consistency/agreement within about 1 of
statistical fuel consumption (energy forecast)
and calculated fuel consumption (COPERT)
12COPERT input car population
- Car fleet
- Start from last inventories population
- Apply decay factor (function of age of car)
- Grow total in line with growth in fuel usage (as
a starting point) - Newly registered cars as differential between
total car number and existing cars - Assume new cars meet the required standards
13COPERT input car population
14COPERT input car population
15COPERT input LDV, HDV, bus, coach
- LDV similar to cars
- HDV total number growth at fixed rate (rather
than in line with fuel forcast) - Buses/coaches total number growth at fixed rate
(average over last few years)
16Road transport different scenarios
- With Measures (Baseline) scenario is constructed
first - With Additional Measures (White Paper) and
- Economic Shock
- are derived from With Measures scenario
- using With Measures fleet population
- adjusting mileage to achieve agreement between
statistical fuel use (energy forecast) and
calculated fuel use (COPERT)
17Road transport challenges
- Balance the aim for consistency with energy
forecast, and consistency with e.g. inventory - Fuel tourism
- Data availability
18Other transport
- Rail is not included in the energy forecast.
Emission projections are developed in
consultation with Irish Rail. - Aviation not included in the energy forecast.
Emission projections are developed in
consultation with Dublin Airport Authority. - Navigation emissions are assumed to stay constant.
19Agriculture
- There are a lot of sheep in Ireland
20Agriculture
- There are a lot of sheep in Ireland
Reality is that cattle outnumber sheep and NH3
emissions associated with cattle make up about
80 of NH3 emissions.
21NH3 Agriculture contribution
- Almost all NH3 from agriculture
- Around 80 attributable to cattle, very stable
- Further decrease for total NH3 emissions
projected - Fraction attributable to cattle staying at about
80
22Approach Projections Input Data
- Projected animal numbers, crop areas and
fertiliser use statistics - FAPRI Ireland Partnership
- Food and Agriculture Policy Research Institute
- Produce objective analysis of agricultural policy
options based on economic models of commodity
markets
23Advantages of Irish Approach(Agriculture)
- Use of inventory model to project forward
- Data required and supplied generally at
aggregation of the inventory - Transparent and straight-forward
- Easy to implement sub-sector changes and examine
scenarios
24Overview
- Introduction
- General approach
- Transport
- Agriculture
- Solvents
- Conclusions
25Solvents and other product use
- Paint application
- Degreasing and Dry Cleaning
- Per capita emissions are assumed constant, thus
growth in line with population growth. - Chemical Products
- Other Solvent Uses
- Per capita emissions were declining since 1990
trend assumed to go forward.
26Overview
- Introduction
- General approach
- Transport
- Agriculture
- Solvents
- Conclusions
27Overall conclusionsAdvantages of Irish Approach
- Consistency with inventories/historic data
- Emission factors
- Same model (e.g. NH3 agriculture, road
traffic/COPERT) - Consistency with national energy forecast
- Consistency with GHG projections
28Overall conclusionsDisadvantages of Irish
Approach
- Requires detailed activity data statistics (e.g.
agriculture) - Transport projection is not straight forward
- Fuel tourism causes conflict between
- Consistency with energy forecast for fuel and
- realistic car population/mileage
- Energy forecast currently at aggregated level (no
breakdown within fuel types yet)
29- Thank you for your attention.
30(No Transcript)
31Approach Inventory Input Data
- Cattle Sheep Poultry
- Dairy cows Lowland ewes Layers
- Suckler cows Upland ewes Broilers
- Male cattle lt 1 year Rams Turkeys
- Male cattle 1-2 years Lambs
- Male cattle gt 2 years Other livestock
- Female cattle lt 1 year Pigs Horses
- Female cattle 1-2 years Sows in pig Mules and
Asses - Female cattle gt 2 years Sows for breeding Goats
- Bulls for breeding Gilts in pig
- Dairy in-calf heifers Gilts notyet served Other
Data - Beef in-calf heifers Fattening pigs lt 20kg Manure
Management statistics - Fattening pigs gt 20kg Fertilzer use
statistics - NH3 emission estimates
- Sludge application to land