114 Views

Carbon Emission – EPA’s Green House Gas (GHG) reporting Requirement

1 reply [Last post]
User offline. Last seen 1 year 42 weeks ago. Offline
Joined: 11/11/2009
Posts: 1
Points: 122

The proposed GHG reporting requirements will create significant regulatory compliance obligations and potential liabilities for a wide range of energy and industrial entities.
The Proposed Rule requires stationary fuel combustion sources that emit more than 25,000 tons of carbon dioxide
Each major facility will have to assess whether its emissions trigger reporting requirements.
Calculate or monitor its emissions, publish emissions reports, and set up an internal quality assurance system.
Begin recording their emissions on January 1, 2010.
Covered entities will be required to report their 2010 GHG emissions to EPA by March 31, 2011
“Facility” is defined as “any physical property, plant building, structure, source, or stationary equipment located
Several states such as California, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Wisconsin, and Washington have recently issued or proposed GHG reporting regulations applying to certain sectors and sometimes with lower GHG emission thresholds (e.g., 5,000 tons per year of CO2 in Massachusetts or 10,000 tons per year CO2e in Wisconsin).
Selva Kumar
Partner
BalanceCO2
www.balanceco2.com
US:CANADA:INDIA:AFRICA
selva.kumar@balanceco2.com

0
Your rating: None
User offline. Last seen 2 years 22 weeks ago. Offline
Joined: 12/10/2009
Posts: 3
Points: 22

Here is a newsletter item I recently published on the new rule, including tips on addressing the new rule in the short time before it goes into effect.

The USEPA Finalizes Mandatory GHG Reporting Rule
On September 22, 2009, the USEPA released its final federal mandatory greenhouse gas (GHG) estimation and reporting rule. It will be 40 CFR Part 98. Most affected industries will be required to begin to collect appropriate data beginning in calendar year 2010 and report emissions for that year in 2011 and annual emissions thereafter. Therefore, with precious little time remaining this year to set up your systems and procedures before appropriate data must be collected and handled, it is imperative that you understand the rule’s requirements and prepare for it NOW. The USEPA said that the program will apply to roughly 10,000 facilities accounting for about 85% of national GHG emissions. These include several dozen industrial categories, as well as any facility that emits 25,000 metric tons or more of CO2 equivalents per year from combustion sources. The USEPA has stated it wants accurate emissions data as a precursor to potential future mandatory carbon cap and trade rules.
Bill’s Provisions
The USEPA made a number of changes from the draft bill published in April 2009 based on public comment. One of the largest is leaving 12 industry segments on hold. These facilities must still calculate GHG emissions from combustion per Subpart C. The rule excludes facilities from reporting if GHG emissions if shown to be below 25,000 metric tons/year for five straight years or below 15,000 metric tons/year for three straight years. The rule requires accurate GHG emissions (in metric tons/year) to be developed at the facility level, with some exceptions, such as suppliers of fossil fuels and industrial gases, which must report on the corporate level and assume all of their product sold is utilized. Emissions of the main, recognized six GHGs (CO2, CH4, N2O, SF6, HFCs, and PFCs) must be addressed. CO2 emissions must be divided between biogenic (from combustion of biomass) and all other fuel sources. Ongoing annual emissions (beginning CY 2010) must be calculated and submitted in an electronic report to the USEPA by March 31 of each year (beginning in 2011). The report must be describe the methodology and contain a monitoring plan. It must be certified by a facility Designated Representative that the information submitted is true, accurate and prepared in accordance with 40 CFR Part 98. Because of the late date of the finalization of the rule, for the period of January 1 through March 31, 2010, best available monitoring (BAM) methods may be used for parameters that cannot reasonably be monitored using the methodology defined. Beginning April 1, 2010, BAM can only be used if pre-approved by the USEPA in writing; by December 1, all published monitoring methods must be in place.
How to Prepare
If your facility has been on the fence about this rule, well, it’s time to get off right now. There is precious little time before the rule goes into effect, January 1, 2010. Some steps:
1. Does this new rule, in fact, apply to your facility? Go through the list of industrial categories in Subpart A. Also, determine whether your facility (covered by a category or not) meets the annual 25,000 metric ton CO2 equivalent emission limit or not. Most GHG emissions derive from combustion. Table C-1 contains emission factors for different fuels for the initial estimate. Determine other GHG emissions (i.e., methane loss) before concluding whether the threshold is met.
2. Obtain a full understanding of the emission calculation procedures. Read through the applicable section(s) and gain an understanding of the nature of the required monitoring, data collection, and calculation methodologies. It is possible that either new monitoring equipment will be needed or existing equipment will need to be used differently. Make sure that any selected equipment or procedures meet the section’s QA/QC guidelines and fits in with your facility and personnel.
3. Ensure that the new procedures or technology can be used in your facility. Proper purchase orders, instructions, training, etc. must be attained so that a new monitoring or data collection process can be incorporated into SOPs smoothly.
4. Perform a “practice run” before the end of 2009. If the procedures for data collection can be incorporated very soon, perform a run of data collection this year – perhaps for one week or one month. Use the data to calculate GHG emissions and determine whether the procedures are working smoothly and producing the high quality GHG emission data required by the USEPA.
5. Create or refine your software to store activity and GHG emission data. You have gone through a lot of trouble to collect the proper data. Now it’s important to reliably store the data for easy access and records. Also, ensure that it can issue reports useful to you for submittal to the USEPA and for your internal purposes.
And finally, inform your colleagues of the important aspects of this rule, ranging from the Designated Representative and managers to floor staff who will be collecting data so that the entire data collection, emission calculation, and reporting processes will go smoothly.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- This document is not meant to be a complete summary of the final GHG emission and reporting rule. All entities should work with a qualified professional when preparing for the federal GHG emission calculation and reporting program. CCES has the experienced professionals to assist you in preparing your facilities to comply with this rule. Contact us at www.CCESworld.com.