Methane
Emissions from Natural Gas Compressor Stations
in the Transmission and Storage Sector: Measurements and Comparisons
with the EPA Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program Protocol
- Publication date
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Abstract
Equipment-
and site-level methane emissions from 45 compressor
stations in the transmission and storage (T&S) sector of the US
natural gas system were measured, including 25 sites required to report
under the EPA greenhouse gas reporting program (GHGRP). Direct measurements
of fugitive and vented sources were combined with AP-42-based exhaust
emission factors (for operating reciprocating engines and turbines)
to produce a study onsite estimate. Site-level methane emissions were
also concurrently measured with downwind-tracer-flux techniques. At
most sites, these two independent estimates agreed within experimental
uncertainty. Site-level methane emissions varied from 2โ880
SCFM. Compressor vents, leaky isolation valves, reciprocating engine
exhaust, and equipment leaks were major sources, and substantial emissions
were observed at both operating and standby compressor stations. The
site-level methane emission rates were highly skewed; the highest
emitting 10% of sites (including two superemitters) contributed 50%
of the aggregate methane emissions, while the lowest emitting 50%
of sites contributed less than 10% of the aggregate emissions. Excluding
the two superemitters, study-average methane emissions from compressor
housings and noncompressor sources are comparable to or lower than
the corresponding effective emission factors used in the EPA greenhouse
gas inventory. If the two superemitters are included in the analysis,
then the average emission factors based on this study could exceed
the EPA greenhouse gas inventory emission factors, which highlights
the potentially important contribution of superemitters to national
emissions. However, quantification of their influence requires knowledge
of the magnitude and frequency of superemitters across the entire
T&S sector. Only 38% of the methane emissions measured by the
comprehensive onsite measurements were reportable under the new EPA
GHGRP because of a combination of inaccurate emission factors for
leakers and exhaust methane, and various exclusions. The bias is
even larger if one accounts for the superemitters, which were not
captured by the onsite measurements. The magnitude of the bias varied
from site to site by site type and operating state. Therefore, while
the GHGRP is a valuable new source of emissions information, care
must be taken when incorporating these data into emission inventories.
The value of the GHGRP can be increased by requiring more direct measurements
of emissions (as opposed to using counts and emission factors), eliminating
exclusions such as rod-packing vents on pressurized reciprocating
compressors in standby mode under Subpart-W, and using more appropriate
emission factors for exhaust methane from reciprocating engines under
Subpart-C