U.S. EPA Accepts Electronically Submitted GHG Reports

 
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has launched a new tool to allow 28 industrial sectors to submit their 2010 greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions data electronically. Prior to being finalized, the electronic GHG Reporting Tool (e-GGRT) was tested by more than 1,000 stakeholders (including industry associations, states and non-governmental organizations) to ensure clarity and user-friendliness.

The data collected with e-GGRT will provide information about the nation’s largest stationary sources of GHG emissions. Industries and businesses will also be able to use the data to help find ways to decrease carbon emissions, increase efficiency and save money.

The EPA expects to receive 2010 GHG data from approximately 7,000 large industrial GHG emitters and suppliers, including power plants, petroleum refineries and landfills.

EPA’s GHG Reporting Program, launched in October 2009, requires the reporting of GHG data from large emission sources across a range of industry sectors. Suppliers of products that would emit GHGs if released, combusted, or oxidized are also required to report GHG data. Under this program, covered entities are required to submit GHG data to EPA annually and the first round of data will be submitted electronically by September 30, 2011.  The EPA plans to publish non-confidential GHG data collected through the GHGRP by the end of 2011. More information is available at: Link
 

U.S. EPA Defers Deadline to Report Factors Used to Calculate GHG Emissions

 
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is deferring the deadline for several industries to disclose factors they used to calculate their 2010 greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. The agency has established two deadlines for industries to report the inputs for calculations they performed to comply with the EPA’s mandatory reporting rule (40 C.F.R. Part 98), while the EPA continues to evaluate industry concerns about revealing potentially confidential business information. For factors the EPA said can be quickly evaluated, industries will be required to report their calculation inputs by March 31, 2013. For factors that will take longer to evaluate, the deadline is March 31, 2015, the agency said in a final rule to be published in the Federal Register on August 25, 2011. The EPA had proposed deferring the input reporting requirements until March 31, 2014 (75 Fed. Reg. 81,350), but now says the additional year is necessary for many of the calculation inputs because “the number of data elements that would require a more in-depth evaluation is much larger than EPA had anticipated at the time of the deferral proposal.” The final rule will require electric transmission systems, stationary sources that burn fuels, underground coal mines, municipal solid waste landfills, industrial wastewater treatment, electric equipment manufacturers, and industrial waste landfills to begin reporting several emissions inputs by March 31, 2013. The various inputs include the total heat input of fuels combusted, methane emissions, the decay rate of materials stored in landfills and the type of coverings used, and volumes of wastewater treated using anaerobic processes.

The second deadline of March 31, 2015 applies to several data elements that must be reported by stationary sources that burn fuels, adipic acid production, aluminum production, ammonia manufacturing, cement production, electronics manufacturers, ferroalloy production, fluorinated gas production, glass production, HCFC-22 production and HFC-23 destruction, hydrogen production, iron and steel production, lead production, lime manufacturing, carbonate uses, nitric acid production, petroleum and natural gas systems, petrochemical production, petroleum refineries, phosphoric acid production, pulp and paper production, silicon carbide production, soda ash manufacturing, titanium dioxide production, zinc production, industrial wastewater treatment, and industrial waste landfills.
Other industries must report inputs by September 30, 2011, which is also the deadline for all industries subject to the mandatory reporting rule to reveal their 2010 emissions.
Industries originally had until March 31 to report their 2010 emissions and calculation factors. But in March, the EPA extended that deadline until September 30th to allow the agency time to review industry concerns that some of the inputs used to calculate their emissions would be considered confidential business information (76 Fed. Reg. 14,812; 53 DEN A-4, 3/18/11). The agency has since determined that GHG emissions and the calculations and test methods used to measure emissions are public information and will not be treated as confidential. They are continuing to examine the factors used in calculations to determine if confidentiality is warranted (102 DEN A-2, 5/26/11). EPA sent another proposed rule to the White House Office of Management and Budget for review on July 13th that would define confidential business information that cannot be disclosed for eight emissions sources, including electronics manufacturing, petroleum and natural gas systems, and carbon sequestration (136 DEN A-9, 7/15/11). (Source: EPA, August, 25, 2011). For more information, see www.epa.gov.
 

ICLEI seeks public input on draft Community-Scale GHG Emissions Accounting and Reporting Protocol

In response to the needs of its member local governments, ICLEI-Local Governments for Sustainability USA (ICLEI was originally established as the International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives) has released a draft Community-Scale GHG Emissions Accounting and Reporting Protocol for public comment.

In response to the needs of its member local governments, ICLEI-Local Governments for Sustainability USA (ICLEI was originally established as the International Council for Local Environmental Initiatives) has released a draft Community-Scale GHG Emissions Accounting and Reporting Protocol for public comment. The deadline for comments is February 11, 2011 and a final Protocol will be established and adopted no later than August 2011.

Rationale for the Community Protocol

Local governments are increasingly looking to create policies that will reduce emissions from the activities of their residents, businesses, and visitors. The emissions reduction process begins with identifying primary sources of emissions and quantifying the scale of emissions from these sources. By establishing standards for community-scale inventories, communities can ensure the consistency and quality of their inventories. In addition, such standards will allow for accurate monitoring of progress against emissions targets, and provide standard guidance as local governments pursue environmental review, inventory certification and other relevant processes in their day-to-day operations. A national standard will form the foundation of future climate actions, thereby enabling communities to address the challenges of climate change more effectively.

The Community Protocol will complement the Local Government Operations Protocol and serve as a U.S. Supplement to the International Emissions Analysis Protocol. The draft framework is available for review online.

U.S. EPA Issues Final Rule for GHG Emissions from Large Emitters

On May 13, 2010, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) issued a final rule for addressing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from stationary sources under permitting programs of the Clean Air Act (CAA).

On May 13, 2010, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) issued a final rule for addressing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from stationary sources under permitting programs of the Clean Air Act (CAA). This rule follows the EPA finding in late 2009 that GHG emissions endanger human health, which allows the EPA to regulate GHGs under the CAA. The final rule sets thresholds for GHG emissions that define when permits under the New Source Review Prevention of Significant Deterioration (PSD) and title V Operating Permit programs are required for new and existing industrial facilities. In particular, regulated facilities would be required to obtain permits showing they are using the best available technology to cut emissions when building new plants or modifying existing ones. The final rule is also referred to as the “tailoring rule” because it tailors the requirements of CAA permitting programs to limit which facilities will be required to obtain PSD and title V Operating Permits.

Starting in January 2011, facilities responsible for almost 70% of U.S. GHG emissions from stationary sources will be subject to permitting requirements. These facilities will include power plants, refineries, factories and cement production facilities that emit 75,000 metric tonnes or more of carbon dioxide equivalent, but will exclude small emitters such as farms, restaurants, hospitals and schools. Without the tailoring, small emitters would also be caught by the rule.

Waste landfills and factories that are not already covered by the CAA that emit at least 100,000 metric tonnes of GHGs per year would get a 6 month extension and would not be regulated until July 2011. Sources that pollute less than 50,000 metric tonnes per year would not be regulated until 2016, if ever, according to the EPA.

The final rule is aimed at giving momentum to the climate bill that was introduced by Senators John Kerry and Joseph Lieberman on May 12, 2010. A number of industry lawsuits have been launched which call into question the EPA’s authority to regulate GHG emissions, however it is President Obama’s hope that the final rule will push lawmakers in states heavily dependent on fossil fuels to support the Kerry-Lieberman bill. As currently drafted, the Kerry-Lieberman bill pre-empts automatic EPA regulations; in the event the Kerry-Lieberman bill is not passed by the Senate, the final rule sets up future regulations for large emitters.

For more information, please refer to the Fact Sheet (Final Rule: Prevention of Significant Deterioration and Title V Greenhouse Gas Tailoring Rule) issued by the EPA: link

U.S. EPA Proposes to Add More Sources to Mandatory GHG Reporting Program

In order to gain a better understanding of greenhouse gas (GHG) emission sources, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing to include additional emissions sources in its national mandatory greenhouse gas (GHG) reporting system.

In October 2009, the EPA finalized the Mandatory Reporting of Greenhouse Gases Rule, which requires 31 industry sectors (representing 85 percent of total U.S. GHG emissions) to track and report their emissions. This reporting rule requires suppliers of fossil fuels or industrial greenhouse gases, manufacturers of vehicles and engines, and facilities that emit 25,000 metric tons or more of GHG emissions per year to submit annual reports to the EPA.

On March 22, 2010, the EPA issued proposed rules targeted at expanding the scope of the reporting system to cover facilities emitting 25,000 metric tons or more of GHG emissions per year in the following sectors:

  • oil and natural gas industry (this will include vented and fugitive methane and CO2 emissions);
  • industries that emit fluorinated gases (source categories will include: electronics manufacturing, fluorinated gas production, manufacture and use of electric transmission and distribution equipment, and imports/exports of equipment pre-charged with fluorinated GHGs or containing fluorinated GHGs in closed-cell foams); and
  • facilities that inject and store CO2 underground for the purposes of geologic sequestration or enhanced oil and gas recovery.

Newly covered sources would be required to begin collecting emissions data on January 1, 2011, with the first annual reports submitted to the EPA on March 31, 2012. In addition, the EPA is proposing to require all facilities in the reporting system, including those proposed, to provide information on their corporate ownership.

These proposals will be open for public comment for 60 days after publication in the Federal Register. The EPA will also hold public hearings on these proposals in April 2010.

For more information on these proposals and the hearings, please go to
Link