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

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

Nevada Statewide Greenhouse Gas Emissions Inventory and Projections, 1990 to 2030 1990 0.620 0.840 Sub-Sector Waste Emissions Table 7-2: Nevada Solid Waste Emissions (MMTCO₂eq) 1995 2000 2005 1.219 MSW 0.562 0.762 1.106 Industrial Waste 0.057 0.078 0.113 Avoided emissions Landfill Flaring LFGTE -0.052 -0.052 1.455 0.149 -0.052 -0.052 2010 1.603 2.015 2.078 1.828 0.187 2011 2012 2013 2.133 2.180 1.885 0.193 -0.163 -0.163 -0.294 -0.731 -0.163. -0.163 1.935 0.198 1.978 0.202 -0.163 -0.163 -0.131 -0.569 0.620 0.840 1.167 1.551 1.852 1.915 1.839 1.449 Total Emissions Figure 7-1: Solid Waste Emissions, 1990 - 2013 (MMTCO₂eq) Landfill flaring 2.5 LFGTE ■MSW 2.0 Industrial waste Emissions (MMTCO₂eq) 1.5 10 1.0 0.5 0.0 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 7.2.2 Projected Emissions Emissions from solid waste are expected to grow through 2030 with the previous 2012 peak being surpassed in 2022. This is because waste is tied to changes in population. As Nevada's population increases, so too will its solid waste. Projections of solid waste have been traditionally tied directly to changes in Nevada's population; that is, when the population increases by a particular percent, there is an equal increase in waste disposed. One of the problems with this method is that it fails to consider changes in recycling efforts, gas-recovery systems, and other changes relating to how people manage their waste and how waste is treated once it gets to the landfill. Because of this, projected emissions in this report are based on forecasted post-recession WIP figures. In this estimate, projections for solid waste emissions do not include increases to landfill gas-recovery systems as none have been formally announced and data in regards to the scaling of existing systems was unavailable. Figure 7-2 shows the historical emissions and a projection of solid waste emissions; actual emissions are solid and avoided emissions from gas-recovery are the dashed areas at the top of the figure. The vertical dashed line marks the end of historical emissions and the beginning of the projections. 31
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