Nevada Statewide Greenhouse Gas Emissions Inventory and Projections, 1990 to 2030 slide image

Nevada Statewide Greenhouse Gas Emissions Inventory and Projections, 1990 to 2030

Fuel Emissions (MMTCO2eq) Nevada Statewide Greenhouse Gas Emissions Inventory and Projections, 1990 to 2030 20 Figure 4-2: Fuel Type CO2 Emissions Compared to VMT in Nevada, 1990 - 2013 30,000 18 16 14 12 10 8 16 + 25,000 20,000 15,000 10,000 I CO2, Jet Fuel/Kerosene I CO2, Distillate Fuel 5,000 I CO2, Motor Gasoline VMT 2 0 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 VMT (Millions) Historical emissions from the transportation sector are listed in Table 4-1. The table shows total sector emissions and total CH4 and N2O emissions for select years and it also highlights the emissions from fuels that either make up a very large portion of sector emissions or are used to power AFVs in the state. Diesel powered vehicle fuel emissions come from jet fuel/kerosene (to a much lesser extent) and distillate fuel (which is the majority of diesel vehicle fuel emissions); when used in diesel-powered vehicles these fuels are otherwise referred to as #1 and #2 diesel, respectively. The SIT does not provide for the separation of fuel types in a way to highlight diesel fuel emissions specifically. Table 4-1: Transportation Sector Historical Emissions, MMTCO₂eq Total CO2, all fuels 1990 9.438 Distillate Fuel 1.418 1995 2000 2005 2010 11.435 14.521 16.794 13.880 1.844 2.694 3.674 3.253 2.987 2011 2012 2013 13.282 13.855 14.311 3.094 3.177 Jet Fuel, Kerosene 1.638 2.947 3.753 3.341 1.541 1.249 1.835 1.945 LPG 0.005 0.005 0.000 0.021 0.017 0.014 0.022 0.019 Motor Gasoline 5.468 6.521 7.940 9.531 8.808 8.619 8.591 8.817 Natural Gas 0.043 0.046 0.070 0.149 0.211 0.258 0.376 0.308 Other Fuels 0.866 0.072 0.064 0.078 0.050 0.048 0.044 0.045 Total CH4, all fuels 0.043 0.047 0.040 0.033 0.023 0.023 0.023 0.022 Total N₂O, all fuels Total Emissions 0.326 0.486 0.530 9.807 11.967 15.091 0.400 0.210 0.197 0.179 0.160 17.226 14.112 13.502 14.057 14.492 Despite the increase in VMT since 2009, transportation emissions have been somewhat stable due to a cleaner fleet of motor vehicles statewide. This is the result of the EPA's strengthening of vehicle emissions standards. Beginning in 1996, vehicles not only came equipped with an onboard diagnostics system to self-test for emissions systems failures, but they also faced much more rigorous federal emissions standards. The EPA has continued to strengthen new vehicle emissions standards as well as vehicle fuel standards. As older vehicles "age-out" of the fleet consisting of all on-road vehicles and are 18
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