LADCO`s Role in State Air Quality Planning
Transcription
LADCO`s Role in State Air Quality Planning
LADCO’s Role in State Air Quality Planning Donna Kenski Lake Michigan Air Directors Consortium June 13-15 AQAST Meeting, Madison WI About LADCO • The Lake Michigan Air Directors Consortium (LADCO) was established in 1990 by the states of Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, and Wisconsin. In March 2004, the states added Ohio as a member, and Minnesota joined in Feb 2012 • The main purpose of LADCO is to – provide technical assessments for and assistance to its member states on problems of air quality; – provide a forum for its member states to discuss air quality issues. • LADCO's major pollutants of concern are ozone, fine particles, regional haze and their precursors • Problems related to other pollutants (such as air toxics) may be assessed at the direction of the member states. • Geographic focus is our member states and any areas which affect air quality in our member states. Technical Support • Schedule dictated by regulatory requirements • Four components: – Emissions inventory development, – Photochemical modeling, – Data analysis, – Monitoring and special projects • All work is done in collaboration with the states, via workgroups EMISSIONS INVENTORIES 2007 Regional Emissions Inventory (TPY) 6,000,000 5,000,000 4,000,000 area on-road MAR 3,000,000 nonroad nonEGU EGU 2,000,000 1,000,000 0 NOX ROG SO2 PM2.5 Commercial Marine 100% 80% 60% Great Lakes 40% Inland Waterways 20% 0% NOx (MT) SOx (MT) HC (MT) PM (MT) Using model performance to improve inventories Base K 2005 Base A 2007 Base M1 Base M2 EGU Temporal, Biogenics, NH3 model for Farms Biogenics , Onroad OC Base B Chemical Speciation, MOVES Base C Better MOVES Emission Inventory Priorities Sector Biogenics Agricultural Ammonia On-road EGU Point Nonroad Area Marine/aircraft rail Fires Future Improvements (1)Need better handling of SOA precursors (2) Process based models(get the physics right) to accurately represent variability in emissions based on meteorology and activity (3) Need faster MOVES model, national link-level networks (4) Need better growth models (5) Need better processing techniques that capture day -specific activities. (6)ERTAC and high spatial resolution( beyond counties) (7)High spatial resolution(links, shipping routes) (8)National inventories built with state prescribed fire activity with more unified data. PHOTOCHEMICAL MODELING Model Overview Models: CAMx/WRF/CONCEPT(EMS) Domain/Grid: N. America (36 km), Midwest (12 km), Great Lakes (4 km) 12 km Base Year: 2007 (->2011) Future Years: 2015, 2020, 2030 (?) 36 km 10 Ozone Attainment Test Kenosha County, WI MONITORING AND DATA ANALYSIS Ozone Design Values: 8-Hour 2001-2003 2009-2011 Meteorologically Adjusted Ozone Trends Chicago Milwaukee Detroit Indianapolis Cleveland Cincinnati 18 Winter Nitrate Study Purpose: Improve understanding of role of emissions (NOx and ammonia) and meteorology in winter PM2.5 episodes Tasks (1) Sampling: Collect continuous measurements of NH3, HNO3, NOy, sulfates, and nitrates at two sites in Wisconsin (December 2008 – March 2009) Mayville Milwaukee (2) Data Analysis: Examine spatial and temporal relationships of ammonia and particulate nitrate, and assess relative effectiveness of reductions in ammonia and nitric acid on PM2.5 – final reports (2) at http://www.ladco.org/reports/pm25/winter_nitrate/index.php 19 January 22, 2009 January 24, 2009 20 Key Findings • Conceptual model of winter PM2.5 nitrate episodes • Meteorology: shallow, stable boundary layer, increases in temperature and humidity (especially, temperatures near freezing and regional snow cover resulting in fog), light winds, cloud cover • Pollutants: NOx (nitric acid production) and ammonia • Episodes in Wisconsin showed strong enhancements in both primary and secondary compounds • Nitrate, in particular, was 2-3 times higher during episodes • Significant differences in winter PM2.5 episode frequency and chemical composition between urban and rural sites • Winter PM2.5 events in upper Midwest vary by year • Emissions sensitivity of episodes indicate the importance of both ammonia and nitrate • Under (sulfate) control scenario, greater sensitivity to nitrate 21 Biomass Project Goal: Develop biomass emission factors based on emission measurements at three power plants in WI Bay Front Ashland, WI Schedule: Stack testing - September 2010 (Bay Front and Nelson Dewey) Ambient monitoring - July 2010-June 2011 * PM2.5-spec, PM2.5-cont, NOx, SO2, NH3, HNO3, BC, met Data analysis – fall 2011 Final report – February 2012 Xcel Energy Bay Front Alliant Energy Nelson Dewey Nelson Dewey & Stoneman Cassville, WI DTE Energy Stoneman 22 Wood Smoke Project Goal: Assess impacts of wood smoke on winter PM2.5 in a community, develop standard approach for responding to wood smoke complaints Tasks: (1) Prepare “toolkit” with basic information, easy-to-use monitors, recommended actions (2) Conduct case study in community impacted by OWBs, wood stoves, other wood or vegetation burning Grand Rapids Grand Rapids, WI 23 Preliminary source apportionment from wood smoke study Mercury Deposition Monitoring Red sites are recently closed; black sites are operating as of 2012 # % %# % % % % % % % % # % # # % % % # % # # # # % # # # % # # % % % % % % #% % % % # % % % %% % Under grant from Great Lakes Commission: 1. Re-start two (2) of IN mercury sites 2. Assess mercury network in Midwest * Spatial analyses: correlation, unmonitored area, area/population served * Emissions inventory analysis * Trends analysis * Back trajectories 25 Hg Emissions Density, lbs/yr/sq.mi Current challenges • State Implementation Plan (SIP) development and support (figuring out how to meet tighter AQ standards) – improving photochemical model performance and validation through higher resolution grids, better met modeling (needs more QA and validation); chemistry to improve SOA – emission inventory improvements, especially for biogenics, NH3, and mobile sources • New monitoring requirements for ozone, NO2, SO2 (doing more monitoring with less money) • Assessing AQ impacts from fracking, natural gas pipelines • Continuing efforts to develop conceptual models of PM2.5, especially wrt winter nitrate, wood smoke, and SOA QUESTIONS?