1 / 27

A Comparison of Air Emissions from Natural G as P athways for Road Transportation

A Comparison of Air Emissions from Natural G as P athways for Road Transportation. Fan Tong, Paulina Jaramillo, Ines Azevedo Department of Engineering and Public Policy Carnegie Mellon University. 2013-14 Northrop Grumman Fellowship. Natural Gas Use in the Transportation Sector.

ramla
Télécharger la présentation

A Comparison of Air Emissions from Natural G as P athways for Road Transportation

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Comparison of Air Emissions from Natural Gas Pathways for Road Transportation Fan Tong, Paulina Jaramillo, Ines Azevedo Department of Engineering and Public Policy Carnegie Mellon University 2013-14 Northrop Grumman Fellowship

  2. Natural Gas Use in the Transportation Sector • Potential benefits: cost savings, energy security, and cleaner combustion. • Barriers: lack of fueling infrastructure, high upfront cost. Both figures are drawn with data from EIA’s website

  3. Research Questions • What are the life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions of natural gas pathways? • Which pathway or which vehicle application provides the largest greenhouse gas emission reduction compared to conventional liquid pathways? • How does methane leakage affect the life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions of natural gas pathways? • What are the key parameters/stages to reduce life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions of natural gas pathways?

  4. Research Gap • Limitations of existing studies • Hard to compare the results because studies tend to use different assumptions and system boundaries. (Wang et al., 2002; Jaramillo et al., 2008; Samaras et al., 2008; Sioshansi et al., 2009; Michalek et al., 2011). • There are a few natural gas-centered studies on light-duty vehicles (LDVs), but they are either limited in pathways considered (Venkatesh et al., 2011; NRC, 2013) or comprehensive but outdated (Wang et al., 2000; NRC, 2010a). • There is relatively few existing studies on air emissions from alternative fuels for heavy-duty vehicles except for transit buses.(Beer et al., 2002; Ally, et al., 2007; Clark et al., 2007; Graham et al., 2008; Hesterberg, et al., 2013; Weigel, 2009; Krupnick, 2010; NRC, 2010b & 2014; EPA, 2011; Meyer et al., 2011; Meier, et al., 2013; MJB&A, 2014) • Few studies treated uncertainty and variability explicitly (Venkatesh et al., 2011). • Estimates of natural gas upstream GHG emissions have been controversial. However, new on-site measurements of natural gas upstream emissions (Allen et al., 2013; EPA GHGRP 2013) are available.

  5. Functional unit: km Greenhouse gases: CO2, CH4, N2O Global warming potential: IPCC (2013)

  6. Vehicle Specifications

  7. Results - Passenger Vehicles

  8. Results - Passenger Vehicles

  9. Results – Line-haul Tractor Trailers

  10. Results – Line-haul Tractor Trailers

  11. What roles do leakage rate and fuel economy play for CNG and LNG pathways?

  12. Break-even leakage rate is a linear function of relative fuel economy of NGVs

  13. Conclusions • Not all natural gas pathways achieve GHG emission reductions compared to existing petroleum pathways. • Indirect use of natural gas to produce electricityutilized in BEVsachieves significant reductions in all applicable vehicle segments. • E85, M85, and Fischer-Tropsch liquids are very unlikely to achieve emission reductions while hydrogen fuel cell electric vehicles, CNG and LNG pathways are possible (to a varying extent). • Emission reduction potentials of CNG and LNG depend on two key parameters, life-cycle methane leakage rate and relative fuel economy of natural gas vehicles. • Assuming a 90% relative fuel economy, the break-even leakage rate is around 1.2% or around 3.0% for 20-year and 100-year GWP. • An efficiency-increasing technology, such as hybridization or electrification, allows higher leakage rate to achieve emission reductions.

  14. Thank you!ftong@Andrew.cmu.edu Supported by 2013-14 Northrop Grumman Fellowship

  15. Results - Passenger Vehicles

  16. Results – Line-haul Tractor Trailers

  17. Results – Transit Buses

  18. Natural gas upstream GHG emissions

  19. Natural gas upstream GHG emissions

  20. Natural gas upstream GHG emissions

  21. Natural gas upstream GHG emissions

More Related