2006 Progress Report: Development and Evaluation of a Methodology for Determining Air Pollution Emissions Relative to Geophysical and Societal Change
EPA Grant Number: R831449Title: Development and Evaluation of a Methodology for Determining Air Pollution Emissions Relative to Geophysical and Societal Change
Investigators: Williams, Allen , Bye, Beth , Donaghy, Kieran P. , Ha, Soo Jung , Hewings, Geoffrey , Lee, Dong-Jun , Lufin Varas, Marcelo Leonardo , Pallathucheril, Varkki , Tao, Zhining , Wuebbles, Donald J.
Current Investigators: Williams, Allen , Bye, Beth , Donaghy, Kieran P. , Ha, Soo Jung , Hewings, Geoffrey , Pallathucheril, Varkki , Tao, Zhining , Wuebbles, Donald J.
Institution: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
EPA Project Officer: Bloomer, Bryan
Project Period: February 1, 2004 through January 31, 2007 (Extended to July 31, 2007)
Project Period Covered by this Report: February 1, 2006 through January 31, 2007
Project Amount: $749,999
RFA: Consequences of Global Change for Air Quality: Spatial Patterns in Air Pollution Emissions (2003)
Research Category: Global Climate Change , Air Quality and Air Toxics
Description:
Objective:The primary objective is to develop an Emissions Inventory Modeling System (EIMS) that uses a regional econometric input-output model and emissions development tools to formulate future emissions inventories for different social and climate change scenarios in the format consistent with the National Emissions Inventory (NEI). We take into account changes in population, economy, policy and regulations, technology, transportation, energy usage, landscape and land-use, and vegetation and land cover in development of a future emissions inventory. Our approach for anthropogenic emissions is to formulate the emission projections for a given scenario into source classification code (SCC)-based growth factors that can be used to project forward the NEI. Biogenic emissions are projected with a terrestrial land-use model in consideration of different climate change scenarios. Finally a Decision Support System (DSS) is developed that allows users to obtain background information, explore data, and analyze and evaluate alternative scenarios through a graphic user interface available in a public web domain. The development and application of the EIMS will make a major contribution to a key goal of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Global Change Research Program to quantify the emissions associated with, and resulting effects of, regional and global changes in air quality.
Progress Summary:- We re-specified the discrete-time Chicago Regional Econometric Input-Output Model (REIM) into a continuous time model and successfully developed various emissions scenarios for that region.
- We developed an alternative method to project future emission intensity (EMI) that links EMI to sectoral economic outputs. The new approach is an addition to the one we developed last year and will enhance our capability to create a wider range of emissions scenarios.
- We are close to completing development of the continuous time Midwest REIM. The respective EMI of each pollutant for each economic sector in each individual state is estimated and applied in the preliminary effort to develop future emissions inventory for the Midwest United States.
- We finished the land-cover simulation using the Argo-Issue-Based Information System (IBIS) model under the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) A1Fi emissions scenario for 2050. The climate projections are based on a state-of-the-art regional climate model developed and operated in the Illinois State Water Survey (ISWS).
- We developed the prototype of the Web-based DSS.
- Complete development of the continuous time Midwest REIM and develop a different economic outlook to support emissions projections.
- Refine and complete the new approach of estimating future EMI and apply, in combination with the ones formulated last year, to develop various future emissions scenarios.
- Complete the procedure that generates an NEI-like future emissions inventory so that it can be directly input to Sparse Matrix Operator Kernel Emissions (SMOKE) model, an emissions processing model.
- Complete the development of DSS and have Version 1 available to EPA and other interested groups.
- Complete the final project report.
- Publish the results in peer-reviewed journals.
Journal Articles on this Report: 1 Displayed | Download in RIS Format
Other project views: | All 6 publications | 2 publications in selected types | All 2 journal articles |
Type | Citation | ||
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Tao Z, Williams A, Huang H-C, Caughey M, Liang X-Z. Sensitivity of U.S. surface ozone to future emissions and climate changes. Geophysical Research Letters 2007;34:L08811, doi:10.1029/2007GL029455. |
R831449 (2006) R831449 (Final) |
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global change, climate change, emission, emission intensity, stationary sources, mobile sources, biogenic sources, land-use change, energy usage, population, vehicle mileage traveled, technological change, policy and regulation, continuous-time model, regional econometric input-output model, regional climate model, air quality model, decision support system,
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Ecosystem Protection/Environmental Exposure & Risk, Air, Scientific Discipline, RFA, climate change, Ecological Risk Assessment, Air Pollution Effects, Atmospheric Sciences, Monitoring/Modeling, Environmental Monitoring, meteorology, climate model, Global Climate Change, atmospheric models, future projections, air quality, atmospheric dispersion models, greenhouse gas, regional emissions model, land use, climatic influence, economic models, climate models, Emissions Inventory Modeling System, atmospheric chemistry, climate variability, environmental measurement, environmental stress, emissions inventory, global change, emissions monitoring, ambient air pollution, anthropogenic stress, ecological models, greenhouse gases
Progress and Final Reports:
2004 Progress Report
2005 Progress Report
Original Abstract
Final Report