FINAL1 Inventory, Emissions, and Population July 2, 2003 AIR, Inc.

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FINAL 1 Inventory, Emissions, and Population July 2, 2003 AIR, Inc.

Transcript of FINAL1 Inventory, Emissions, and Population July 2, 2003 AIR, Inc.

Page 1: FINAL1 Inventory, Emissions, and Population July 2, 2003 AIR, Inc.

FINAL 1

Inventory, Emissions, and Population

July 2, 2003

AIR, Inc.

Page 2: FINAL1 Inventory, Emissions, and Population July 2, 2003 AIR, Inc.

FINAL 2

Overview

• Exhaust Emissions

• Evaporative Emissions

• Populations

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FINAL 3

Materials Received/Utilized from ARB

Population and Activity Memo April 14Hot soak RVP data April 15Evaporative Spreadsheets (preliminary) April 17Evaporative Emissions Memo April 21Tier 3 Exhaust Emission Factors May 1Lifetime emissions and cost effectiveness June 5Equipment Survey Data June 8Total inventories June 26Cost effectiveness model/assumptions June 30Inventories split by exhaust vs evaporative July 1Audit data analysis ??

Page 4: FINAL1 Inventory, Emissions, and Population July 2, 2003 AIR, Inc.

FINAL 4

Exhaust Emissions

• Major comment is that the baseline does not reflect the Premium Program– baseline is used to determine cost effectiveness of proposed Tier 3

exhaust standards

Page 5: FINAL1 Inventory, Emissions, and Population July 2, 2003 AIR, Inc.

FINAL 5

Premium Program

• What is it?

• Performance

• OFFROAD assumptions

• Lifetime emission impacts

• Summary

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FINAL 6

What is it?

• 1999 exhaust proposal included Tier 2 and Tier 3– Tier 2 implemented in 2000, Tier 3 was to be implemented in 2004

• Final rule included Tier 2 and Premium Program– Premium Program covered the emission reductions of Tier 3

– Briggs and Stratton and Tecumseh were participants

Page 7: FINAL1 Inventory, Emissions, and Population July 2, 2003 AIR, Inc.

FINAL 7

2002 Class 1 Engine Exhaust HC + NOx

0.00

2.00

4.00

6.00

8.00

10.00

12.00

Zero Hour Useful Life

HC

+ N

Ox

Preliminary Industry-Wide Estimate

ARB Emission Factor

Page 8: FINAL1 Inventory, Emissions, and Population July 2, 2003 AIR, Inc.

FINAL 8

2002 Class 2 Engine Exhaust HC + NOx

0.00

1.00

2.00

3.00

4.00

5.00

6.00

7.00

8.00

9.00

10.00

Zero Hour Useful Life

HC

+ N

Ox

Preliminary Industry-Wide Estimate

ARB Emission Factor

Page 9: FINAL1 Inventory, Emissions, and Population July 2, 2003 AIR, Inc.

FINAL 9

Premium Program

• Data show 2002 emissions lower than assumed in some analyses

Page 10: FINAL1 Inventory, Emissions, and Population July 2, 2003 AIR, Inc.

FINAL 10

OFFROAD Model

• Also does not include the effects of the Premium Program– Districts have not been able to book these reductions

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FINAL 11

Tier 3 Lifetime HC + NOx Reductions Per Unit (lbs)

Equipment Without PremiumProgram

With PremiumProgram

Lawnmower 3.1 2.4

Commercial Turf 280.3 238.7

*AIR estimates of emission reductions for both cases

Page 12: FINAL1 Inventory, Emissions, and Population July 2, 2003 AIR, Inc.

FINAL 12

Tier 3 Exhaust Cost Effectiveness

• Residential Lawnmower

• Assumes ARB standards implemented as proposed

• Exhaust cost increase: $54 (Briggs and Stratton)

• Preliminary estimate: $44,000 per ton of HC+NOx

Page 13: FINAL1 Inventory, Emissions, and Population July 2, 2003 AIR, Inc.

FINAL 13

Summary - Exhaust Emissions

• ARB should revise its Tier 2 baseline for estimating proposed Tier 3 cost effectiveness

• OFFROAD model should be revised

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FINAL 14

Evaporative Emissions

• Concerns:– Baseline and control diurnal and resting losses overestimated

– Baseline running loss deterioration too high

– RVP effect for hot soak and running losses too large

– Running loss reductions depend on technology used

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FINAL 15

Diurnal and Resting Losses

• ARB definition of evap processes in OFFROAD model: they cannot overlap

• However, for ARB’s lifetime emission reductions and cost-effectiveness, they do overlap (“partial” diurnals)

• This results in some double-counting of emissions

• This will be addressed in soon-to-be released OFFROAD model, but is not yet addressed in ARB’s lifetime emissions, inventories, or cost/effectiveness– Small effect for residential equipment, significant for commercial

– Could not address magnitude of this effect for workshop

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Running Loss Deterioration

• Diurnal, resting loss and hot soak emissions for lawnmowers estimated on 23 lawnmowers– New, Used, Old

• Running losses estimated on only 4 lawnmowers

• Running loss deterioration not consistent with other evap components– One Alternative: use deterioration on other components to predict

running loss deterioration

• Similar concern for other equipment

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FINAL 17

Ratio of Lawnmower Emissions at Different Ages to Emissions at Zero Hour

0.00

2.00

4.00

6.00

8.00

10.00

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14.00

16.00

18.00

Diurnal Resting Hot Soak Running

Evap Component

Rat

io o

f E

mis

sio

ns

Zero Hour

Used

Old

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FINAL 18

Hot Soak and Running Loss RVP Effect

• ARB developed RVP effect at 95F and is applying it at all temperatures

• Annual RVP assumed (8.1) may not reflect seasonal activity differences

• RVP does not have same effect at all temperatures• Increases baseline and controlled emissions by same

percentage (25%), so benefit of controls is also larger• One alternative is to eliminate this effect

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FINAL 19

Running Loss Reductions

• ARB estimated at 50%– test data indicates 42%

• New lawnmower percent reduction will not apply when equipment older– Should use g/hr reduction on new engines at all ages

• Also, reductions depend on control technology used– Pressurized system with TPCV only gets permeation benefit,

because pressure controls have to be “open” when engine running

– Canister controls would get permeation + vapor benefit, since canister is connected to tank during engine operation - no data

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FINAL 20

Baseline Evaporative HC Lifetime Emissions Per Unit (lbs)

Lawnmower(Class 1)

Commercial Turf(Class 2)

Current Approach 17.5 71.6

With modifiedrunning lossdeterioration

15.1 48.8

Without RVPeffect

14.3 41.3

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FINAL 21

Tier 3 Evap HC Reductions Per Unit (lbs)

Lawnmower(Class 1)

Commercial Turf(Class 2)

Current 12.1 42.8

Revised 9.9 24.3

Revised: ARB method and assumptions, and includes changes to baseline, and smallerrunning loss reduction

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FINAL 22

Population and Activity

• Evaluated population and activity changes

• Why discuss this?– Population/activityinventoriestargets for alternatives

– Activityproportion of evap vs exhaust

• Concern– Populations must be consistent with Census data

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FINAL 23

Populations

• ARB conducted equipment survey

• Survey is being used to update populations

• Large proposed changes in populations– Lawnmowers: 2.4 million to 4 million

– Chainsaws: 0.6 million to 2.1 million

– Trimmers/edgers: 0.8 million to 2.8 million

• Inventories based on these new populations appear in the SCAQMD SIP

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FINAL 24

Survey and Method

• 15,000 surveys sent– 2200 responded to survey (<15%)

– 220 agreed to use data loggers (<2%)

• Equipment populations were determined in the 2200 households

• Total California households were determined: 11.5 million

• Popstate = Popsuvey x 11.5 million/2200

• Problem: Survey overweighted single detached residences, which have a higher equipment ownership

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FINAL 25

Fraction of Residence Types

Type ARB Survey 2000 Census, California

Single, detached 80% 57%

Single, attached 4% 8%

Multiple 12% 31%

Mobile Home 3% 3%

Boat, van, RV 1% 1%

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FINAL 26

Equipment Per Residence

Residence Ratio, Equipment to Residences

Single, detached 1.07

Single, attached 0.07

Multiple 0.07

Mobile home 0.67

Boat/RV 0.67

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FINAL 27

Survey

• These tables indicate that sample must be re-weighted by Census residence type fractions

• This will have a significant effect on populations, and therefore, inventories

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FINAL 28

Summary - Population

• ARB proposed populations should be revised to match Census residence demographics

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FINAL 29

Summary

• Exhaust– Tier 2 baseline emissions should include Premium Program

• Evaporative– Size of inventory and reductions uncertain

• Population– Too high