Comparison of two US power-plant carbon dioxide emissions data sets

被引:60
|
作者
Ackerman, Katherine V. [1 ]
Sundquist, Eric T. [1 ]
机构
[1] US Geol Survey, Woods Hole, MA 02543 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1021/es800221q
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Estimates of fossil-fuel CO2 emissions are needed to address a variety of climate-change mitigation concerns over a broad range of spatial and temporal scales, We compared two data sets that report power-plant CO2 emissions in the conterminous U.S. for 2004, the most recent year reported in both data sets. The data sets were obtained from the Department of Energy's Energy Information Administration (EIA) and the Environmental Protection Agency's eGRID database. Conterminous U.S. total emissions computed from the data sets differed by 3.5% for total plant emissions (electricity plus useful thermal output) and 2.3% for electricity generation only. These differences are well within previous estimates of uncertainty in annual U.S. fossil-fuel emissions. However, the corresponding average absolute differences between estimates of emissions from individual power plants were much larger, 16.9% and 25.3%, respectively. By statistical analysis, we identified several potential sources of differences between EIA and eGRID estimates for individual plants. Estimates that are based partly or entirely on monitoring of stack gases (reported by eGRID only) differed significantly from estimates based on fuel consumption (as reported by EIA). Differences in accounting methods appear to explain differences in estimates for emissions from electricity generation from combined heat and power plants, and for total and electricity generation emissions from plants that burn nonconventional fuels (e.g., biomass). Our analysis suggests the need for care in utilizing emissions data from individual power plants, and the need for transparency in documenting the accounting and monitoring methods used to estimate emissions.
引用
收藏
页码:5688 / 5693
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] A Hybrid Power-plant System To Reduce Carbon Emissions
    Ebaid, Munzer S. Y.
    Mustafa, Mohamad Y.
    [J]. JORDAN JOURNAL OF MECHANICAL AND INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING, 2011, 5 (02): : 185 - 192
  • [2] POWER-PLANT EMISSIONS CONTROL
    LAWRENCE, WF
    [J]. MINING CONGRESS JOURNAL, 1972, 58 (04): : 84 - &
  • [3] POWER-PLANT EMISSIONS - AN OVERVIEW
    ARMOR, JN
    [J]. ENVIRONMENTAL CATALYSIS, 1994, 552 : 170 - 171
  • [4] CONTROL OF CARBON-DIOXIDE EMISSIONS FROM A POWER-PLANT (AND USE IN ENHANCED OIL-RECOVERY)
    HORN, FL
    STEINBERG, M
    [J]. FUEL, 1982, 61 (05) : 415 - 422
  • [5] EFFECT OF POWER-PLANT EMISSIONS ON PLANT COMMUNITY STRUCTURE
    SINGH, J
    AGRAWAL, M
    NARAYAN, D
    [J]. ECOTOXICOLOGY, 1994, 3 (02) : 110 - 122
  • [6] OZONE FORMATION RELATED TO POWER-PLANT EMISSIONS
    MILLER, DF
    ALKEZWEENY, AJ
    HALES, JM
    LEE, RN
    [J]. SCIENCE, 1978, 202 (4373) : 1186 - 1188
  • [7] IMPACT OF THERMAL POWER-PLANT EMISSIONS ON VEGETATION AND SOIL
    PANDEY, SN
    [J]. WATER AIR AND SOIL POLLUTION, 1983, 19 (01): : 87 - 100
  • [8] POWER-PLANT FAN NOISE DATA
    GRAHAM, JB
    [J]. IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON POWER APPARATUS AND SYSTEMS, 1979, 98 (04): : 1174 - 1177
  • [9] Comparison of carbon dioxide emissions for two landfill capping layers
    Raja, Jamil
    Dixon, Neil
    Fowmes, Gary
    Frost, Matthew
    Assinder, Peter
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE INSTITUTION OF CIVIL ENGINEERS-ENGINEERING SUSTAINABILITY, 2014, 167 (05) : 197 - 207
  • [10] INFLUENCE OF POWER-PLANT EMISSIONS AND INDUSTRIAL EMISSIONS ON THE LEEWARD OZONE LEVELS
    MOUSSIOPOULOS, N
    [J]. ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT PART A-GENERAL TOPICS, 1990, 24 (06): : 1451 - 1460