BIOHER assessment: Difference between revisions

From Opasnet
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 203: Line 203:
*[http://www.energia.fi/content/root%20content/energiateollisuus/fi/julkaisut%20ja%20tutkimukset/liitteet%20tutkimukset%20ja%20selvitykset/kaukolammityksenasiakasrajapinnanteknis-taloudellisetreunaehdot.pdf?SectionUri=%2Ffi%2Fjulkaisut Kaukolämmityksen asiakasrajapinnan teknis-taloudelliset reunaehdot sis.mm.Kaukolämpöliittymien kustannusselvitys]
*[http://www.energia.fi/content/root%20content/energiateollisuus/fi/julkaisut%20ja%20tutkimukset/liitteet%20tutkimukset%20ja%20selvitykset/kaukolammityksenasiakasrajapinnanteknis-taloudellisetreunaehdot.pdf?SectionUri=%2Ffi%2Fjulkaisut Kaukolämmityksen asiakasrajapinnan teknis-taloudelliset reunaehdot sis.mm.Kaukolämpöliittymien kustannusselvitys]
*[http://www.ymparisto.fi/download.asp?contentid=82087 Parhaan käyttökelpoisen tekniikan huomioonottaminen ympäristölupamenettelyssä (esimerkkinä alle 50MWn polttolaitokset)]
*[http://www.ymparisto.fi/download.asp?contentid=82087 Parhaan käyttökelpoisen tekniikan huomioonottaminen ympäristölupamenettelyssä (esimerkkinä alle 50MWn polttolaitokset)]
*[http://www.ymparisto.fi/download.asp?contentid=3706 Paras käytettävissä oleva tekniikka (BAT) 5-50 MW:n polttolaitoksissa Suomessa]


[[Category:Health_effects]] [[Category:Classical_air_pollutants]]
[[Category:Health_effects]] [[Category:Classical_air_pollutants]]

Revision as of 06:28, 1 September 2011

This assessment calls for new participants to work on this important topic.
Opasnet is a web-workspace for improving decision-making by collecting and distributing important knowledge. It is based on the work by a large group of interested and active volunteers who want to make a difference.

If you are interested, please add your username under the Participants heading. Make also sure that My preferences of your account contain a valid email address for you, so that other Opasnet users can contact you (the email is not disclosed to other users).

Health and climate impacts of heat production in small municipalities (BIOHER)

This is assessment page of Bioher. Bioher is a research project coordinated by National Institute for Health and Welfare (THL). The duration is 2008-2011. Project includes five subprojects with 1) measurement of PM and greenhouse gas emissions, 2) chemical characterization and assessment of atmospheric thermal impact of emitted PM, 3) toxicological characterization of emitted PM, 4) assessment of exposure to and health effects of current residential wood combustion, 5) assessment of health risks.

This assessment page includes scope, definition, and result of health risk assessment of fine particles of four residential heating scenarios/decisions. Main study questions are:

  • How human risks differs between four heating scenarios/decisions?
  • What are the costs of emissions and health effects due to different heating scenarios/decisions?
  • What are climate change impacts of PM emissions and health effects due to CC?

The Analytica model can be accessed here


Scope

Purpose

The purpose is to evaluate PM2.5 and green house gas (GHG) emissions of detached houses and small heating power plant, to assess exposure and health effects due to evaluated emissions and to define emission, heating and health effect costs. Assessment is going to compare four alternative ways to arrange decentralized energy production in communities with 2000 - 10000 inhabitants: light oil and pellets as fuel of detached houses and heavy oil and wood chips as fuel of small heating plants. In addition, environmental effects i.e. climate change (CC) of PM2.5 and GHG emissions is assessed with this model.

Questions:

  • What would be the health effects of PM2.5 emissions of small power plant and individual houses in small living area (2000- 10000 inh.)?
  • What are GHG emissions of individual houses and small power plant and how emissions effect on CC?
  • What are the costs of different alternatives?
  • What is the optimal decision to produce energy and heat to houses?

Boundaries

  • Energy production (single house and small energy plant level, 1-20MW)
  • Population (2000-10000 inh.)
  • Exposure for PM2.5
  • ER-functions for PM2.5
  • PM2.5 emissions (->health effects)
  • PM2.5 climate effect (-> health effects)
  • Household heating scenarios:
    • Light oil and pellets
  • Small heating plant scenarios:
    • Heavy oil and wood chips
  • Atmospheric thermal impact
  • DALY
  • Impacts:
    • Climate change
    • Premature mortality
    • Costs

Scenarios

Scenarios include two different fuel types of energy production in detached houses and small power plant:
Detached houses

  • light oil
  • Pellets


Small power plant

  • Heavy oil
  • Wood chips

Intended users

  • City-level policy-makers in all sectors in Kuopio as well as everywhere else
  • International policy-makers related climate change
  • Policy-makers related health risks of fine particles and green house gases
  • General public
  • Scientists working on health risks of fine particles, green house gases and climate change
  • Other interested of topic

Participants

Results

  • Floor area in Bioher is approximately 50 m2 per inhabitant that is 500 000 m2 in total area.
  • PM2.5 emissions are approximately 372 mg/s and CO2 emissions are 4.4 t/s in Bioher.
  • Exposure to PM2.5 (µg/m3) of Bioher population is 0.31 for heating production part and 0.23 for district heating part. Total exposure is 0.54 µg/m3 for Bioher population. Exposure due electricity emissions has not taken account yet.
  • PM2.5 emissions of own heating of houses and small municipality plant heating production (=district heating) causes approximately 1.4 premature deaths in ten years in Bioher case.

Conclusions

Definition

Figure 1. Main model of health effect assessment in Bioher.

Variables

Decision

This variable is not clear yet!!

  • Decisions of citizen level between different heating systems
    • Is there district heating system available (emissions from small power plant -> decisions of society level)
    • Own heating system: fuel types (pellets/light oil)
    • Building stock (energy efficiency of buildings)
  • Decisions of society level
    • Extent of district heating system
    • Fuel type of energy production (heavy oil/wood chips)
    • Building stock (energy efficiency of buildings)

Population

Population in Bioher is 10 000 inhabitants (For the comparison, the page of Population of Finland describes population of Finland.)

House stock

House stock as floor area in Bioher is indexed with house types (detached, row and block houses) and fuel types and all data is based on Finnish statistics. Building statistics in Finland have been described more intensively in the page of Heating systems in buildings in Finland.

Heating consumption

Heating consumption is merged in three different energy consumption calculations/variables:

These three variables based on method of calculation of Heating consumption of buildings with heating of tap water in buildings, heating consumption with monthly temperature variation and Energy efficiency of buildings in Finland.

Heating consumption by own heating means own heating systems in houses. In Bioher 34 % of total heating was produced with own heating system, 28% of total heating was electricity and 38% of heat was produced as district heating in small heating plant. Fraction of each variable is calculated in the page of Heating systems in buildings in Finland.

Emission

PM2.5 and GHG emissions in Bioher is described in the variable of Emissions in Bioher. In emission calculation knowledge of Emission factors for burning processes have been used.

Exposure

Exposure to PM2.5 in Bioher is based on rough estimate due emissions, intake fraction of population and breathing rate. Because emission estimates based direct emissions of source, dispersion is not taken account. Also exposure indoors is not taken account YET.

Health effect

In Bioher premature mortality are considered firstly as health effects due emissions (Health effects in Bioher). Exposure response factors (ERF) of PM2.5 for all causes, cardiopulmonary and lung cancer are described in ERF of PM2.5 on mortality in general population. Used ERF for premature mortality was 0.6. Background mortality of Bioher populaiton is 86 deaths in one year.

Expenses

Costs can be devided in two part: costs of heat production and costs of health effects. Costs of heat production in Bioher includes fuel, investment and service prices. For now all costs includes only fuel prices (Prices of fuels in heat production). Costs of health effects are defined more in CLAIH assessment.

Climate change

???

  • Positive effect (warming)
    • CO2
    • BC (black carbon)
    • CH4
    • N2O
    • CFC
    • NOx?
    • H2O?
  • Negative effect (cool down)
    • PM2.5
    • Albedo (soil surface, snow, clouds)


Other variables in the scale of Finland

Emissions in Finland:

Exposure in Finland:

Analyses

  • Cost-benefit and cost-effectiveness analyses
  • value-of-information (VOI) analysis

See also