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CORINAIR 90 was extended to include countries outside the EU and now includes 30 countries (although not all of these have reported as yet). All of these countries agreed to contribute and have worked together to produce a single system for the whole of Europe. Definitions had to be agreed. Software was distributed and data collected by national experts.
This effort involved:
When national CORINAIR 90 inventories have been compiled and checked, the data is then transferred to an ORACLE database held by the EEA, and the results of the European wide inventory are collated and distributed to users. Table 3 summarises the information which is contained in CORINAIR 90 and the requirements of some potential users. Table 4 is a summary of CORINAIR 90 data for Europe and an example of the more detailed data available from CORINAIR 90 is shown in Table 5.
Table 3 CORINAIR 90 Specifications and User Requirements
CORINAIR 90 |
UNECE | EMEP | IPCC | EU Large Combustion Plant Directive |
OSPAR & HELCOM |
EU Greenhouse Gas Reporting | Other (e.g. Policy makers, NFP) | |
POLLUTANTS | ||||||||
SO2 | · | · | · | · | ||||
NOx | · | · | · | · | · | |||
CO2 | · | · | · | · | ||||
CH4 | · | · | · | · | ||||
N20 | · | · | ||||||
NMVOC | · | · | · | · | ||||
CO | · | · | · | · | ||||
NH3 | · | · | · | |||||
OTHER | · HFCs · CF4 · C2F6 · SF6 |
Heavy
metals
|
Other gases required by the IPCC but data requested not expected. | ·Particulates · Specific VOCs |
||||
SOURCE CATEGORIES | ||||||||
CORINAIR SNAP LEVEL 1 - 11 GROUPS | · | · | · | |||||
CORINAIR SNAP LEVEL 2 - 57 CATEGORIES | · | |||||||
CORINAIR
SNAP LEVEL 3 - ABOUT 240 CATEGORIES , |
· | |||||||
OTHER | · Point Sources | · 6
groups split into 71 categories · Sinks (partial) |
·
Existing plant ³ 300 MW · Existing plant 50 to 300 MW · New plant ³ 50 MW |
IPCC Source Categories | · DGXI
VOC directive: to be specified · Policy makers: ISIC and socio -economic categories |
|||
SPATIAL RESOLUTION | ||||||||
NUTS LEVEL 0 (NATIONAL) | · | · | · | · | · | · | · | |
NUTS LEVEL 3 | · | · | ||||||
OTHER | · Individual large point sources as defined by CORINAIR 90 | · 50 x 50 km grid | · Individual large point sources as defined in directive | · Not fully defined yet | ·
Individual point sources · Smaller grids · Urban inventories |
|||
TIME-SCALES | ||||||||
PROVISIONAL DATA | 7 months | |||||||
REVISED DATA | 12 months | 12 months | 21 months | 9 months | 19 months |
Table 4 CORINAIR 90 Summary for Europe
Table 5 Detailed CORINAIR 90 Data for France 1990 Emissions (as Mg except CO2 as Gg) for Industrial combustion plant and Processes with Combustion
SNAP | Process | SO2 | NOx | NMVOC | CH4 | CO | CO2 | N20 | NH3 |
030000 | Industrial combustion plant and processes with combustion | 514090 | 164965 | 7282 | 6623 | 598176 | 87391 | 2070 | 0 |
030100 | Combustion in boilers, gas turbines and stationary engines | 328113 | 66742 | 2398 | 2299 | 8328 | 44311 | 1570 | 0 |
030101 | Combustion plants ³ 300 MW | 113600 | 18556 | 603 | 565 | 2337 | 12653 | 458 | 0 |
030102 | Combustion plants ³ 50 MW and < 300 MW | 70365 | 17216 | 564 | 501 | 2028 | 11664 | 366 | 0 |
030103 | Combustion plants < 50 MW | 144116 | 29604 | 1200 | 1200 | 3871 | 19478 | 724 | 0 |
030104 | Gas turbines | 31 | 1366 | 33 | 33 | 91 | 517 | 23 | 0 |
030105 | Stationary engines | IE | IE | IE | IE | IE | IE | IE | IE |
030200 | Process furnaces without contact(1) | 63083 | 13959 | 594 | 586 | 5739 | 12247 | 283 | 0 |
030201 | Refinery processes furnaces | 49353 | 6246 | 205 | 202 | 1046 | 4854 | 190 | 0 |
030202 | Coke oven furnaces | 13196 | 7137 | 380 | 380 | 4282 | 1106 | 14 | 0 |
030203 | Blast furnaces cowpers | 0 | 454 | 0 | 0 | 394 | 6200 | 76 | 0 |
030204 | Plaster furnaces | 534 | 122 | 9 | 4 | 17 | 87 | 4 | 0 |
030300 | Processes with contact (2) | 122895 | 84263 | 4290 | 3739 | 584109 | 30833 | 217 | 0 |
030301 | Sinter plant | 26389 | 20994 | 660 | 2423 | 549998 | 3080 | 178 | 0 |
030302 | Reheating furnaces steel and iron | 3569 | 2521 | 986 | 118 | 508 | 833 | 0 | 0 |
030303 | Gray iron foundries | 374 | 104 | 187 | 21 | 12456 | 83 | 0 | 0 |
030304 | Primary lead production | 21804 | 85 | 1 | 0 | 18 | 78 | 0 | 0 |
030305 | Primary zinc production | 13946 | 61 | 1 | 0 | 11 | 49 | 0 | 0 |
030306 | Primary copper production | 9 | 103 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
030307 | Secondary lead production | 3700 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
030308 | Secondary zinc production | 0 | 15 | 18 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
030309 | Secondary copper production | 27 | 5 | 80 | 0 | 10 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
030310 | Secondary aluminium production | 107 | 82 | 22 | 0 | 13 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
030311 | Cement | 16572 | 33666 | 1158 | 1158 | 9262 | 17946 | 0 | 0 |
030312 | Lime (including iron and steel and paper pulp industries) | 162 | 1750 | 14 | 0 | 174 | 2401 | 0 | 0 |
030313 | Asphalt concrete plants | 8640 | 576 | 227 | 0 | 1644 | 829 | 28 | 0 |
030314 | Flat glass | 22141 | 20946 | 0 | 0 | 288 | 3311 | 0 | 0 |
030318 | Mineral wool (except binding) | NEG | NEG | NEG | NEG | NEG | NEG | NEG | NEG |
030319 | Bricks and tiles | 3976 | 2565 | 282 | 0 | 8209 | 1657 | 0 | 0 |
030320 | Fine ceramic materials | 706 | 456 | 50 | 0 | 1458 | 294 | 0 | 0 |
030321 | Paper-mill industry (drying process) | 773 | 335 | 18 | 18 | 61 | 272 | 11 | 0 |
030322 | Alumina production | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Key: 0 = non-existing activity or no emission
expected,
NEG = neglected
IE = included elsewhere)
(1) Processes where flames and/or combustion gases are not in contact with other
products
(2) Processes where flames and/or combustion gases are in contact with
other products
Note: CO2 estimated as "at source"
3.1 Achievements of CORINAIR 90.
While this paper will discuss in detail the problems of CORINAIR 90 it is important to remember that the CORINAIR 90 project has had many significant successes.
CORINAIR 90 is a major step forward in the compilation of a European inventory system that has achieved the highest level of completeness, consistency, comparability and transparency reached to date in such a wide international collaboration. While there are many different ways in which the individual countrys inventories differ the overall inventory is a major step forward in achieving its goals.
The collaboration, assisted by CITEPA, between EMEP and CORINAIR and other technical experts, has produced a system that covers 30 countries with a wide range of experience in the development of their national emission inventories. For some countries CORINAIR 90, was their first attempt at a national inventory while others already had a well developed national system.
CORINAIR 90 has resulted in a source classification, SNAP codes, that now has a wide acceptance in Europe. This is forming the basis of the joint EMEP/CORINAIR guidebook on emission inventories. Several countries wish to use CORINAIR 90 type inventories for data submission to UNECE (and EMEP) and IPCC (with the data conversion routines produced by CITEPA).
Unfortunately, the time-scale for completion of the CORINAIR 90 was not explicitly specified and adhered to as an important objective at the beginning of the project.
3.2 National Approaches to CORINAIR 90
An overview of possible national approaches to producing CORINAIR 90 is shown in Figure 1. Countries have taken different approaches to CORINAIR 90. The questionnaires (with 17 replies out of 31 participants) show that 4 countries used CORINAIR 90 to produce their national estimates, while 7 have ensured that their national estimates are consistent with CORINAIR 90. (Annex A describes the results of the questionnaires. Box 1 gives examples of the approaches taken in particular countries, and Annex B summarises the characteristics of each countrys CORINAIR 90 database).
Each country has reasons for adopting their individual approach and in the medium term the Emissions Inventory Topic Centre must either answer their concerns and needs or include them in any future methodology. A long term aim for the Topic Centre should be the adoption of a single methodology across Europe.
Figure 1 - Overview of Approaches to CORINAIR 90
Box 1 Examples of National Approaches to CORINAIR 90
CORINAIR 90 is only now starting to produce its results. A complete inventory will only be available five years after the end of 1990. CORINAIR 85 has only been completely reported in 1995. These long delays have obscured the many successes of the projects and have severely compromised the usefulness of the whole exercise. It is possible that when the data is finally published it is of limited use to policy makers. It is far too late to supply the data requirements listed in Section 5.3.
There are a number of reasons for this. They include:-
It is important to distinguish between technical problems that may delay the production of an inventory and structural or political limitations. The former may include the late supply of data collected by others e.g. road transport statistics, while the latter may involve the need to get agreement from various official bodies about the data. Some of the institutional problems which have occurred, e.g. delays in funding or contracts may be improved in Air Emissions 94 by the switch from a voluntary collaboration to a more structured framework of national focal points and national reference centres.
For references, please go to https://eea.europa.eu./publications/92-9167-022-7/page004.html or scan the QR code.
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