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Malé Declaration 2 nd emissions inventory workshop AIT, Bangkok, 26 th – 28 th February 2007 Session 6 - QA/QC Application (and updates to Malé Manual and Workbook (now Version 2.2) Harry Vallack, Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI) University of York, UK
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Most important changes are: Biofuel sulphur retention-in-ash:- now assumed to be negligible (not 40%) Made clearer that International civil aviation is not included in fuel combustion sheets (Worksheets 1.1.1 – 1.1.1c) Ammonia (NH 3 ) emissions from coke production now included (India, Iran and Pakistan) ‘Process emissions from mineral products’ (cement kilns, brick kilns, lime kilns etc) – the default PM emission factors given in the Malé workbook include combustion as well as process emissions. (i.e. Double-counting problem) Food processing (cooked meat only) New FAOSTAT links Updated section on waste combustion
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Solid biomass fuel sulphur retention-in-ash now assumed to be negligible
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Ammonia emissions from coke production added
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Double counting PM emissions from mineral products
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Updated section on waste combustion 8.2 Procedure selected for use in this Manual The suggested procedure for estimation of annual emissions from the combustion of wastes includes the following steps: Estimate total amount of Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) generated by multiplying the population whose waste is collected (i.e. the urban population) by a per capita MSW generation rate (country specific values are given in Annex 2A.1 of the draft 2006 IPCC guidelines Estimate the fraction of total MSW which is incinerated (some country- specific data are also included in Annex 2A.1 of the draft 2006 IPCC guidelines and a default of 5% would seem appropriate for most developing countries unless country specific data are given. Unless better information is available, assume this waste in burned in the open.
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Updated section on waste combustion
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Practical QA/QC session: Check that the IEA data you entered for your country’s baseline (2000) inventory conform with the principles learned from Exercise 3 (fuel combustion) and Exercises 4 (Fugitive emissions for fuel). Check that International civil aviation is not included in fuel combustion sheets (Worksheets 1.1.1 – 1.1.1c) (Sheets 1.2.1 -1.2.4) Set biofuel sulphur retention-in-ash to zero (Sheets 1.2.1 -1.2.4) Check that cooked meat only is include under Food production (Sheet 2.6) Check for fuel combustion/process PM emissions for minerals production (double counting issue) Check waste incineration assumptions. Ammonia emissions from coke production (India, Iran and Pakistan)
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Data checks for: Transcription errors – has the number been copied over accurately and in the correct format (i.e. do not use gaps for the thousands delineator [10000 not 10 000] and you must use a dot ‘. ’ for decimal places not a comma ‘, ’) ‘Units’ errors – have you identified the source data units correctly (e.g. 1000s tonnes or tonnes; 1000s animals or head animals) and are they the same as required in workbook (or must they be converted first). [Also remember in the FAOSTAT database ‘MT’ = metric tonnes!!] Practical QA/QC session:
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Have the correct conversion factors been used – double check your maths (e.g. for NCV: MJ/kg converted to toe/t). Did you record all references to activity data sources and non-default emission factors, S content of fuels or S retention-in-ash values in the tables provided at the bottom of each relevant worksheet (if not, make a note to do this when you get home). Practical QA/QC session:
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