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VERTIC/REC Workshop Fulfilling the monitoring and reporting requirements under the UNFCCC and Kyoto Protocol National Systems and Greenhouse Gas Inventories ENERGY Dr. Christo Christov Energy Institute JSCo Sofia, Bulgaria 9-10 October 2006, Budapest, Hungary 1 Energy Institute is an independent private joint-stock company providing solutions in the field of energy, environmental protection and climate change. For the recent fife years we have developed more than 200 projects in the field of the nuclear and thermal energy, power transmission and distribution, co-generation, district heating and renewable energy. Energy Institute and climate change: • The First, Second, Third and Forth National Communications on Climate Change, • The First and Second National Action Plan on Climate Change • National Greenhouse Gases (GHG) Inventories and National Inventory Reports for the years 1988, 1990 – 2004. • EU ETS National Allocation Plan • Demonstrable Progress Report to the UN FCCC • Advises to the Governmental officials on national policies and measures for reducing GHG emissions 2 BULGARIA and UNFCCC • Bulgaria ratified the Convention in March 1995, • Pursuant to article 4 (section 2c and 6) of the UNFCCC, Bulgaria used its right to choose as a base year different from the commonly accepted 1990, i.e. 1988. • Bulgaria ratified the Kyoto Protocol to the UNFCCC on August 15th, 2002. The target adopted by Bulgaria is an 8% reduction compared to the base year 1988. 3 Historic overview of GDP and GHG emissions GHG emissions and GDP trends, % (1988 =100%) 100 95 90 85 80 % 75 70 65 60 55 50 45 40 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 Year GDP GHG 4 Summary In 2002 Bulgaria achieved reduction minus 56%. Drivers: • Governmental policies for transition to the market economy, restructuring of industry, privatisation and liberalization; • Energy policy towards liberalization of the energy market and removal of subsidies; The GHG intensity (GHG/GDP) of the Bulgarian economy decreased by 46% in 2002. The accounted emission reduction results from two factors: • GDP and population decrease: 33%; • Economic and energy policies: 67%. Significant increase of the GHG emissions due to the early termination of two nuclear reactors operation at the end of 2002 Next emissions increase - two next reactors to be shut down ahead of the design operation term in 2006 5 Energy Sector Contribution to the GHG Emissions TOTAL Party EU - 15 BG Gg CO2 equiv Energy % of Total CO2 CO2 equiv Fuel Combustion % of total CO2 CO2 equiv 4 811 989 70 68 69 68 67 511 75 72 72 72 6 A. Fuel Combustion Activities (Sectoral Approach) 1. Energy Industries • a. Public Electricity and Heat Production • b. Petroleum Refining • c. Manufacture of Solid Fuels and Other Energy Industries 2. Manufacturing Industries and Construction • a. Iron and Steel • b. Non-Ferrous Metals • c. Chemicals • d. Pulp, Paper and Print • e. Food Processing, Beverages and Tobacco • f. Other (please specify) – BG Autoproducers 7 A. Fuel Combustion Activities (cont.) 3. Transport • a. Civil Aviation • b. Road Transportation • c. Railways • d. Navigation • e. Other Transportation (please specify) 4. Other Sectors • a. Commercial/Institutional • b. Residential • c. Agriculture /Forestry/Fisheries 5. Other (please specify) • a. Stationary • b. Mobile Memo Items: • International Bunkers Aviation/Marine • Multilateral Operations CO2 • Emissions from Biomass 8 Information Sources – Activity Data, NCV Stationary combustion – National Statistics 23 fuel groups in 20 sub source groups SOLID • Hard coal • Patent fuels • Coke • Brown coals • Lignite • Lignite coal briquettes • Tar, benzol • Coke-oven gas • Blast-furn. gas • Gasworks gas Natural gas LIQUID • Crude oil • Distillates • Refinery gas • LPG • Gasoline • Kerosene, jet fuels • Naphtha • Gas / diesel oil • Residual fuel oil • White spirit • Lubricants • Bitumen • Petroleum coke 9 Information Sources – Activity Data (cont.) Mobile combustion • National Statistics, • Ministry of Interior, • Ministry of Transportation, • Ministry of Finance Non energy fuel use • National Statistics • International Bunkers • Aviation • Marine No Representative Sources Expert estimates for the shares of Inland and International fuel consumption 10 Information Sources – Emission Factors Stationary combustion • CO2 - Calculations based on Certificates for delivery: • Carbon content • NCV • Oxidation, based on the combustion technology • CH4 and N2O based on the combustion technology : • measurements • IPCC default Mobile combustion – Modelling 11 Reference Approach Fuels: • Production • Imports • Exports • International bunkers • Stock change • Conversion factors (NCV) • Carbon content • Carbon stored • Carbon oxidation Information sources • National Statistics • IEA Statistics • Ministry of Finance • Ministry of Transportation • Customs Administration • Ministry of Economy and Energy 12 B. Fugitive Emissions from Fuels 1. Solid Fuels • a. Coal Mining • b. Solid Fuel Transformation Underground Mines Mining Activities Post-Mining Activities. Surface Mines Mining Activities Post-Mining Activities 2. Oil and Natural Gas • a. Oil • b. Natural Gas • c. Venting and Flaring • Venting • Flaring. 13 B. Fugitive Emissions from Fuels (cont.) 1. B. 2. a. Oil i. Exploration ii. Production iii. Transport iv. Refining / Storage v. Distribution of oil products • 1. B. 2. b. Natural Gas • Exploration • i. Production / Processing • ii. Transmission Distribution • iii. Other Leakage • • • • Pipelines length (km) • Number of gas wells • Gas throughput Pipelines length (km) Number of oil wells Oil throughput 14 Information Sources – Activity Data • • • • • • Ministry of Economy and Energy National Statistics Coal Mines Refineries Gas and Oil Producer companies Transmission and distribution companies Information Sources – Emission Factors • IPCC Default • Measurement –companies and research institutes 15 The National System and the Energy Sector Inventory activities include: • collecting activity data, • key source analysis, • selecting methods and emission factors, • estimating anthropogenic GHG emissions, • implementing uncertainty assessment, • quality assurance/quality control (QA/QC) • inventory report preparation The System should include: • Legislation within the country related to the maintenance of the system, authority to collect and publish data (e.g., activity data), • Rules for the internal organization of the entities responsible for and involved in preparing the Energy Sector inventory , • Rules for coordination between these institutions 16 The National System and the Energy Sector Legislation: one or more of the following acts should be amended: • Energy Act • Environmental Protection Act • Act for the National Statistics As well as the secondary legislation (Regulations) to set: 1. The Single Entity (it should be familiar with the Energy Sector!!!) 2. Specific responsibilities delegated to the institutions that collect data for the energy sector inventory 3. Requirement for formal agreements or MOUs with any companies or other government ministries for the collection of activity data 4. Incorporation of Energy Sector QA/QC procedures into data suppliers data collection processes so as to ensure that the quality of their data meets the needs of the national inventory 17 The Regulation(s) should set: Definition and allocation of specific responsibilities in: • choice of methods, • data collection, particularly activity data and emission factors, • processing and archiving, and QC and QA. This definition shall specify the roles of, and cooperation between entities involved in the preparation of the inventory. QA/QC plan that specifies in detail the quality control checks and the quality assurance review process that are to be implemented within the every entity. The resources and staff in the entity that is performing Energy sector inventory will need to be dedicated to inventory work for much if not all of the year because planning, collecting data, preparing estimates, implementing QA/QC, and then finalizing the Energy part of NIR and CRF tables is taking many months. 18 The Regulations (QA/QC program) should set as well: • Processes for the official consideration and approval of the Energy inventory prior to its submission for compilation of the general inventory • Processes to respond to any issues raised by the inventory review process under focus on continuous improvement and continuous attention to maintaining quality. • Process for utilisation of the latest scientific information incorporation into Energy emission estimates. • Ways to improve the quality of activity data, emission factors, methods following the Information obtained from the implementation of the QA/QC programme Review of the Energy inventory by personnel that have not been involved in the inventory development, preferably an independent third party and for a more extensive review of the inventory for key source categories, as well as source categories where significant changes in methods or data have been made 19 Organizations involved in the Energy inventory process • • • • • • • • • Ministry of Environment and Water – planning Executive Environmental Agency – responsible entity, archiving National Statistics – data collection, QA/QC, data supply Primary data sources – enterprises to fill in the statistical questionnaires Ministry of Economy and Energy – general data out of the NS Ministry of Interior – transport fleet data Ministry of Finance and Custom Administration – import/export, road/offroad fuel consumption (excise) Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry – biomass fuel consumption Energy production companies – specific data out of the NS 20 Energy Institute and Energy inventory (now and till 2007) Regular participation in a Public Procurement Act procedure (bid) If the Institute is awarded the contract: • Key source analysis • List of the necessary data • Selection of methods and Ef • Modeling of the mobile combustion • Compilation of the inventory • OA/QC tier 1&2 • Uncertainty analysis • Compilation of the Energy chapter and annexes for the NIR • Response to any issues raised by the inventory review process • Continuous improvement of the inventor process • Archiving 21 Inventory process after 2007 (according to a decision of the MoEW) • • • • • • • • • • Single Entity - Executive Environmental Agency Key source analysis – National statistics List of the necessary data – National statistics Selection of methods and Ef – National statistics Modeling of the mobile combustion – National statistics Compilation of the inventory – National statistics OA/QC tier 1&2 – National statistics Uncertainty analysis – National statistics Compilation of the NIR – National statistics Response to any issues raised by the inventory review process – National statistics • Continuous improvement of the inventor process – National statistics • Archiving – National statistics 22 The Ministry considers that today Legal base and Regulations does not need any amendments to meet the National System Requirements • The two existing inventory experts at the Executive Environmental Agency are enough to coordinate the inventory process • The National Inventory Process (System) will be situated as subsystem to the National Air Quality Monitoring System • The National Statistics staff and rules do not need enhancement National Methodology for Monitoring of Air Pollutants and GHG Emissions based on CORINAIR and IPCC should be elaborated till 2007 end, and implemented for the 2008 inventory. 23 Thanks for your attention! Contacts: Dr. Christo Christov, Executive Director Energy Institute, 20 Joliot – Curie Str., Sofia 1113, Bulgaria Phone: (359 2) 969 86 38, (359 2) 866 91 20 Fax (359 2) 963 40 38, GSM (359 88) 8283889 E-mail: [email protected]; [email protected] 24