Version 2 2017-01-17, 18:54Version 2 2017-01-17, 18:54
Version 1 2016-12-02, 19:41Version 1 2016-12-02, 19:41
dataset
posted on 2017-01-17, 00:00authored byGregory Cooney, Matthew Jamieson, Joe Marriott, Joule Bergerson, Adam Brandt, Timothy J. Skone
The National Energy Technology Laboratory produced a well-to-wheels
(WTW) life cycle greenhouse gas analysis of petroleum-based fuels
consumed in the U.S. in 2005, known as the NETL 2005 Petroleum Baseline.
This study uses a set of engineering-based, open-source models combined
with publicly available data to calculate baseline results for 2014.
An increase between the 2005 baseline and the 2014 results presented
here (e.g., 92.4 vs 96.2 g CO2e/MJ gasoline, + 4.1%) are
due to changes both in modeling platform and in the U.S. petroleum
sector. An updated result for 2005 was calculated to minimize the
effect of the change in modeling platform, and emissions for gasoline
in 2014 were about 2% lower than in 2005 (98.1 vs 96.2 g CO2e/MJ gasoline). The same methods were utilized to forecast emissions
from fuels out to 2040, indicating maximum changes from the 2014 gasoline
result between +2.1% and −1.4%. The changing baseline values
lead to potential compliance challenges with frameworks such as the
Energy Independence and Security Act (EISA) Section 526, which states
that Federal agencies should not purchase alternative fuels unless
their life cycle GHG emissions are less than those of conventionally
produced, petroleum-derived fuels.