1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review 1999-2011 New Hampshire July 2013.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Earth’s Changing Environment Lecture 3 Air Quality.
Advertisements

1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review Washington July 2013.
1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review Colorado May 2013.
1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review Nevada May 2013.
1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review Ohio July 2013.
1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review New Jersey May 2013.
Did the recession impact recent decreases in observed sulfate concentrations? Shao-Hang Chu, US EPA/OAQPS/AQAD October, 2011.
1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review California July 2013.
Small-Group Activity: NAAQS Exercise Nate Herbst Southern Ute Indian Tribe.
Preparation of Control Strategies October 18, 2007 NAAQS RIA Workshop Darryl Weatherhead, Kevin Culligan, Serpil Kayin, David Misenheimer, Larry Sorrels.
1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review Utah May 2013.
1 Ozone Trends at Cleanest 10% Sites March 2010 Till Stoeckenius, Lan Ma, Lynsey Parker ENVIRON International Corp. & Gregory Stella Alpine Geophysics,
1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review Virginia May 2013.
1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review Connecticut July 2013.
1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review New York May 2013.
1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review Central States May 2013.
1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review Alabama May 2013.
1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review Maryland May 2013.
1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review Florida May 2013.
1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review Arkansas July 2013.
1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review North Dakota July 2013.
1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review Midwestern States July 2013.
1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review Michigan July 2013.
1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review Idaho July 2013.
1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review Western States July 2013.
1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review Iowa May 2013.
1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review Northeastern States July 2013.
1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review North Carolina May 2013.
1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review Wisconsin July 2013.
1 Long Range Transport of Air Pollution Air pollution can travel hundreds of miles and cause multiple health and environmental problems on regional or.
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Michigan Air Emissions
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Emission and Air Quality Trends Review
Presentation transcript:

1 Emission and Air Quality Trends Review New Hampshire July 2013

2 Project Objective  To develop and present publicly available information on trends in emissions and ambient air quality in the U.S. since 1999 in easy to understand visual and tabular formats

3 Emission Trends  Study Team collected and processed U.S. EPA emission inventories for years within the study period of interest ( )  By pollutant and source category electric utility coal fuel combustion mobile sources industrial fuel combustion & industrial processes all other

4 Emissions Data Summary  Data Obtained from EPA National Emission Inventory (NEI) and Trends Websites EPA’s Trends reports and emission comparisons include interpolations of all categories between key years (1999, 2002, 2005, 2008, 2011) at county-pollutant level Represented Pollutants: VOC, NOx, SO 2, and PM 2.5  Project Improvement The Study Team augmented above data with year specific CEM emissions (2002 through 2011)

5 Emission Changes  The following slides also include the tonnage-based emissions change from 1999 to 2011 for each pollutant  Negative values indicate decrease in emissions, positive values indicate an increase

6 New Hampshire Emission Trends (VOC) Annual Emissions (Tons) Source Category Electric Utility Coal Fuel Combustion Mobile Sources42,97939,34242,51238,95337,27935,60530,96429,06927,17423,549 Industrial Fuel Combustion & Processes58,55736,93854,17936,68036,27435,86835,46235,05634,65024,718 All Others Total101,69476,43296,86575,77673,67471,60066,53764,22661,92948,391 Annual Emissions Change (Percent since 1999) Source Category Electric Utility Coal Fuel Combustion0%10%15%21%22%28%12%-5%-1%-32% Mobile Sources0%-8%-1%-9%-13%-17%-28%-32%-37%-45% Industrial Fuel Combustion & Processes0%-37%-7%-37%-38%-39% -40%-41%-58% All Others0%-15%6%-33%-57%-55%-61%-58%-57%-14% Total0%-25%-5%-25%-28%-30%-35%-37%-39%-52%

7 New Hampshire Emission Trends (VOC)

8 New Hampshire Emission Trends (NOx) Annual Emissions (Tons) Source Category Electric Utility Coal Fuel Combustion9,6616,1075,6616,7786,7324,1344,2943,3324,4053,414 Mobile Sources50,42046,93245,60050,49548,04145,58737,86833,50229,13524,760 Industrial Fuel Combustion & Processes8,4318,59913,13613,05312,99112,92912,86712,80512,7436,713 All Others3,7222,0824,3912,9871,4521,4641,1381,1441, Total72,23363,72068,78873,31369,21664,11456,16850,78347,30335,857 Annual Emissions Change (Percent since 1999) Source Category Electric Utility Coal Fuel Combustion0%-37%-41%-30% -57%-56%-66%-54%-65% Mobile Sources0%-7%-10%0%-5%-10%-25%-34%-42%-51% Industrial Fuel Combustion & Processes0%2%56%55%54%53% 52%51%-20% All Others0%-44%18%-20%-61% -69% -73%-74% Total0%-12%-5%1%-4%-11%-22%-30%-35%-50%

9 New Hampshire Emission Trends (NOx)

10 New Hampshire Emission Trends (SO 2 ) Annual Emissions (Tons) Source Category Electric Utility Coal Fuel Combustion40,17944,73533,75141,54238,26440,23136,29332,39336,50424,098 Mobile Sources2,4131,9801,6781,5871,3861, Industrial Fuel Combustion & Processes14,72815,69710,18410,52810,42410,31910,21510,11010,0067,138 All Others15,5953,47720,9979,9292,1052, , Total72,91565,88866,61063,58652,17954,10547,83344,09747,34831,803 Annual Emissions Change (Percent since 1999) Source Category Electric Utility Coal Fuel Combustion0%11%-16%3%-5%0%-10%-19%-9%-40% Mobile Sources0%-18%-30%-34%-43%-51%-74%-78%-83%-91% Industrial Fuel Combustion & Processes0%7%-31%-29% -30%-31% -32%-52% All Others0%-78%35%-36%-87%-85%-96%-93%-97%-98% Total0%-10%-9%-13%-28%-26%-34%-40%-35%-56%

11 New Hampshire Emission Trends (SO 2 )

12 New Hampshire Emission Trends (PM 2.5 ) Annual Emissions (Tons) Source Category Electric Utility Coal Fuel Combustion2,2362,4692,2302,3632,3552,5042,1631,8521, Mobile Sources1,9371,7561,6362,1412,0491,9582,0201,9031,7861,630 Industrial Fuel Combustion & Processes12,74610,61013,37713,46413,33513,20713,07912,95012,8229,175 All Others4,9973,9192,2992,1221,9651,9751,9431,9561,9682,367 Total21,91718,75419,54120,08919,70519,64419,20518,66218,49013,442 Annual Emissions Change (Percent since 1999) Source Category Electric Utility Coal Fuel Combustion0%10%0%6%5%12%-3%-17%-14%-88% Mobile Sources0%-9%-16%10%6%1%4%-2%-8%-16% Industrial Fuel Combustion & Processes0%-17%5%6%5%4%3%2%1%-28% All Others0%-22%-54%-58%-61%-60%-61% -53% Total0%-14%-11%-8%-10% -12%-15%-16%-39%

13 New Hampshire Emission Trends (PM 2.5 )

14 Emission Trends Summary  All pollutants have decreased since 1999 in aggregate across New Hampshire  NOx and SO2 from Electric Utility Fuel Combustion sources show significant decrease over time as a result of Acid Rain Program, NOx Budget Trading Program and CAIR control implementation  Onroad emission step increase seen between 2004 and 2005 is the result of EPA’s method change and MOVES model integration for estimating onroad mobile source emissions

15 Air Quality Design Values  Ozone Annual 4 th highest daily maximum 8-hour average averaged over three consecutive years Current standard = ppm  PM 2.5 Annual Annual arithmetic mean of quarterly means averaged over three consecutive years Current standard = 12 ug/m 3  PM Hour Annual 98 th percentile of daily averages averaged over three consecutive years Current standard = 35 ug/m 3

16 State-Wide Design Value (DV) Trends  Trends in state-wide maximum DV and average DV Max DV: Maximum DVs over all valid trend monitoring sites in the state in each overlapping three year period Average DV: Average of DVs over all valid trend monitoring sites in the state in each overlapping three year period  Compute linear trend via least-squares regression

17 Data Handling Procedures  O 3 design value (DV) for each overlapping three- year period starting with and ending with DV calculated using annual 4 th highest daily max 8-hr averages and percent of valid observations, based on EPA data handling conventions Data associated with exceptional events that have received EPA concurrence are omitted Selection of trend sites require valid DV in 9 out of 11 three-year periods between 1999 and 2011 Identification of nonattainment areas is with respect to the hour standard only

18 Data Handling Procedures  Annual PM 2.5 DV and 24-hr PM 2.5 DV for each overlapping three-year period starting with and ending with DV calculations based on EPA data handling conventions Data extracted from monitors that have a non- regulatory monitoring type are omitted Selection of trend sites require valid DV in 9 out of 11 three-year periods between 1999 and 2011

19 Trend Calculation  Trends based on linear least squares fit to rolling three year design values (DVs)  Negative trend indicates improving air quality  DVs based on each 3-year period: , , …  Notes On plots, DVs are for three year period ending in year shown (i.e., DV plotted as 2011 value) Ozone trend values expressed as ppb/year (1,000 ppb = 1 ppm); DVs are plotted as ppm Scale in units of ppm Trend in units of ppb/year

20 Max/Ave O 3 DVs and Trend

21 Ozone Trends by Site in New Hampshire Note: Only monitoring sites meeting data completeness criteria listed Monitoring SitesCounty DV [ppm] Trend [ppm/yr] Belknap, NH Cheshire, NH Coos, NH

22 Max/Ave PM 2.5 Annual DVs and Trend

23 Max/Ave PM Hour DVs and Trend

24 PM 2.5 Trends by Site in New Hampshire Note: Only monitoring sites meeting data completeness criteria listed DV [ug/m 3 ] Trend [ug/m 3 per year] Monitoring SiteCountyAnnual24-HrAnnual DV24-Hr DV BelknapN/A17N/A Cheshire

25 Air Quality Trends Summary  Average O 3 design values have decreased since 1999 in New Hampshire. Average annual and 24-hour PM 2.5 design values, based on data from one and two monitors, respectively, have decreased since 2001 (incomplete data in 1999 and 2000) in New Hampshire  There are no currently designated O 3 or PM 2.5 non-attainment areas in New Hampshire