97-5884. Air Pollution Control; Motor Vehicle Emission Factors  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 46 (Monday, March 10, 1997)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 10849-10852]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-5884]
    
    
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    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    
    [AMS-FRL-5699-8]
    
    
    Air Pollution Control; Motor Vehicle Emission Factors
    
    AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
    
    ACTION: Notice of public workshop.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency is now in the process of 
    developing revision and improvements to the highway vehicle emission 
    factor model (the MOBILE model). The current version of the model, 
    MOBILE5a, was released for use March 26, 1993. The next version of the 
    model, MOBILE6, is tentatively planned for completion early in 1998 and 
    release for use in the summer of 1998. This notice announces the first 
    public workshop for the purpose of discussing issues raised by the 
    pending revisions to the model, and provides the first formal 
    opportunity for comment and reaction to the plans for data collection, 
    analysis, and proposed model revisions. There will be at least one 
    additional MOBILE6 workshop, most probably to be held late this year. 
    The workshop will also include a short presentation concerning EPA's 
    plans for development of a nonroad mobile source emission inventory 
    model.
    
    DATES: The workshop will be held Wednesday, March 19 and Thursday, 
    March 20, 1997. The times are from 8:30 am to 5:00 pm March, and 8:30 
    am to 3:00 pm March 20. Al times are Eastern Standard Time.
    
    ADDRESSES: The workshop will be held in Powsley Auditorium of the 
    Morris Lawrence Building, Washtenaw Community College, 400 East Huron 
    River Drive, Ann Arbor, MI 48106. Directions to the workshop can be 
    requested from the contact person listed below, or from the EPA 
    Technology Transfer Network (TTN) bulletin board system (BBS), or 
    through accessing the OMS World Wide Web (WWW) site. Information on how 
    to electronically access this and other workshop-related information 
    appears immediately below.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Betty Measley, U.S. EPA Office of 
    Mobile Sources, Assessment and Modeling Division, Emission Inventory 
    Group, 2565 Plymouth Road, Ann Arbor MI 48105. Telephone: (313) 741-
    7903; fax (313) 741-7939.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This notice, as well as related information 
    concerning the workshop, may be found in the OMS section of the EPA TTN 
    BBS. To access this information using the WWW:
    
    http://www.epa.gov/OMSWWW/models.htm
    gopher: gopher.epa.gov menusOffices: Air:OMS
    ftp: ftp.epa.gov Chg Dirpub/gopher/OMS
    
        For those directly accessing the TTN BBS by modem connection:
    
    TTNBBS Dial-in: (919) 541-5742 [Voice help: (919) 541-5384]
    Web access to TTN: http://ttnwww.rtpnc.epa.gov
    telnet: ttnbbs.rtpnc.epa.gov (for reading/leaving messages)
    ftp: ttnftp.rtpnc.epa.gov Chg DirH-Drive/OMS
    
        Workshop-related files, including a copy of this notice, a map 
    showing the location of WCC, and later additional information as 
    described in the body of this announcement, will be found at the OMS 
    Section, Models & Utilities Subsection
        Under Section 130 of the Clean Air Act Amendments of 1990, EPA is 
    required to review, and to revise a necessary, the emission factors 
    used to estimate emissions of volatile organic compounds (VOC), carbon 
    monoxide (CO), and oxides of nitrogen (NOX) from area and mobile 
    sources. In the case of highway vehicles, emission factors for these 
    pollutants as a function of various parameters are estimated using the 
    highway vehicle emission factor model, commonly referred to as MOBILE. 
    This model, which was first developed in the late 1970s, has been 
    revised, updated, and improved periodically since that time to account 
    for increasing data and analyses concerning in-use emissions 
    performance of highway vehicles, changes in vehicle and emission 
    control technology, changes in fuel composition, strengthening of 
    applicable emission standards, refinements to applicable test 
    procedures, and other items that affect emission levels in use.
        Section 130 of the Act requires that this emission factor review, 
    and revision as needed, be performed at least every three years. As 
    noted above, the current official version of the model, MOBILE5a, was 
    released in March 1993. Since that time, one interim update to the 
    model has been developed, MOBILE5a__H, released in November 1995. While 
    not involving revision and update to the entire model, this version and 
    developed to address specific needs on the part of emission factor 
    users. MOBILE5a__H incorporated a number of changes intended to improve 
    the ability of modelers, particularly States and local/regional 
    governments, in estimating the benefits of various innovative 
    inspection and maintenance (I/M) programs and to improve the accuracy 
    of modeling situations in which such programs change over time or 
    different programs are applied to different subsets of the covered 
    fleet.
        The time elapsed since the last complete revision to the model and 
    the additional test data and analyses available since that time warrant 
    another thorough update and revision to the model. OMS plans 
    significant changes not only to the underlying emission factor 
    estimates, but to how emissions factors are modeled to account for 
    things such as a separation of start and running exhaust emissions, 
    roadway facility type, average traffic speeds, and a number of other 
    important changes that will affect the input information required to 
    use the model as well as the type of information produced by the model. 
    Thus, this first MOBILE6 workshop will present an overview of the more 
    important model revisions being planned. The tentative agenda for this 
    workshop is discussed below. Other aspects of the modeling of highway 
    vehicle emission that are not specifically included within the 
    following discussion may also be briefly addressed in this workshop; 
    however, the agenda discussed below is intended to illustrate the major 
    areas of discussion for the workshop.
        The workshop being announced by today's notice will span two days. 
    In an effort to facilitate travel plans on the part of attendees, a 
    preliminary agenda for the two days is presented below. Note that the 
    first day (March 19) is largely devoted to ``technical'' issues 
    involved in updating and revising the model, while the second part-day
    
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    (March 20) is focused more on ``user changes,'' meaning those revisions 
    planned that will affect the input data requirements and file structure 
    and output changes. Many attendees will likely want to be present for 
    both sessions, however, some may find that they can limit their 
    attendance to one or the other days based on their specific interests 
    and needs.
    
    Topics To Be Discussed on March 19
    
        The first day of the workshop is planned to include presentations 
    on the new facility-specific speed correction cycles, start emissions 
    and separation of start from running exhaust emissions, technology 
    fractions for future model years, the findings of the in-use 
    deterioration team, effects of fuel oxygenates and sulfur content on 
    emissions, ``real-time'' diurnal evaporative emissions, and revisions 
    to the modeling of emissions from heavy-duty vehicles. Each 
    presentation will be followed by a short discussion/question and answer 
    period, and there should be some time left at the end of the day for 
    more general open discussion of the material that has been presented.
    
    New Facility-Specific Driving Cycles
    
        One area of concern with respect to the accuracy of modeled 
    emission factors has been the methods used to correct emission 
    estimates based on the Federal Test Procedure (FTP), intended to 
    represent overall urban area driving and with an average speed of 19.6 
    mph, for other average speeds. EPA is designing a plan for a much 
    different approach to this issue that we hope to include in MOBILE6, 
    which should both improve the accuracy of emission estimates over the 
    range of travel speeds of interest and improve the integration of 
    emission factor modeling with transportation planning and modeling. 
    This would represent a major departure from the approach taken in 
    previous versions of the model, and will result in significant changes 
    to both the input data requirements and output emission factor 
    estimates relative to earlier versions.
    
    Start Emissions and Separation of Start From Running Emissions
    
        MOBILE has used operating mode fractions (describing the portion of 
    overall vehicle miles travelled (VMT) by vehicles in cold-start, hot-
    start, or stabilized operation) as an input to provide exhaust emission 
    factors in grams per mile that include start emissions. Based on the 
    needs of the air quality and transportation planning communities and 
    the availability of data suitable for this type of analysis, EPA is 
    proposing to make two major changes in this area: Provision of start 
    emissions (in grams per vehicle per start) and stabilized running 
    exhaust emissions (in grams per mile) at the option of the model user, 
    and basing start emission estimates on time that a vehicle has been off 
    (rather than simply ``cold'' and ``hot'' starts, start emissions will 
    be modeled as a function of time that vehicles have been off, or ``soak 
    time'').
    
    Technology Fractions
    
        Emissions from highway vehicles are estimated on a fleetwide basis 
    using information on the fractions of each model years' fleet that use 
    different technologies (e.g., fuel delivery systems, catalytic 
    converter type). Projecting future year emission requires that 
    projections of future technology fractions by model year be included in 
    the MOBILE model. A contractor working for EPA has developed such 
    estimates for future years, which will be presented and discussed.
    
    In-Use Deterioration Team Findings
    
        A team within OMS has spent considerable effort reexamining the 
    extent of and causes of in-use deterioration, or the increase in 
    emissions over time as vehicles accumulate mileage and components, 
    including emission control components, age and degrade in performance. 
    The team has worked in cooperation with the In-Use Deterioration Work 
    Group of the Mobile Source Technical Advisory Subcommittee (a 
    subcommittee to the Clean Air Advisory Committee established under the 
    Federal Advisory Committee Act). All available data on in-use emissions 
    performance over time have been used in an attempt to better quantify 
    the extent of in-use emissions deterioration. An overview of the 
    findings of the team to date, and some of the potential implications 
    for the modeling of in-use deterioration of emissions in MOBILE6, will 
    be presented and discussed at this workshop.
    
    Fuel Sulfur and Oxygenate Content Effects
    
        EPA has known for some time that other aspects of fuel (gasoline) 
    composition, beyond volatility as measured by Reid vapor pressure 
    (RVP), have an impact on emissions. MOBILE5a included the ability for 
    the modeler to specify the effects of RVP, and of oxygenate type (i.e., 
    alcohol or ether blends) and content (% by wgt), on emissions. At this 
    workshop, information on revising and improving the modeling of 
    oxygenate type of content on emissions, and on the impacts of sulfur on 
    emissions, will be presented and discussed.
    
    Onboard Diagnostic System Effects
    
        With the introduction of second generation onboard diagnostic 
    systems (OBD-II) to the light-duty fleet, EPA needs to develop methods 
    of modeling the impact of these systems on reducing in-use 
    deterioration of both exhaust and evaporative emissions, in both 
    inspection/maintenance (I/M) program areas and non-I/M areas. Proposed 
    approaches to including such effects on MOBILE6, based on part on 
    previous work by the California Air Resources Board and recommendations 
    made by the Modeling Work Group of the Mobile Source Technical Advisory 
    Subcommittee, will be presented and discussed.
    
    Heavy-Duty Vehicle Emission Estimates
    
        The estimation of in-use emissions from heavy-duty vehicles is 
    complicated by the fact that such engines are regulated on a mass/work 
    basis (grams per brake horsepower-hour), while users of emission 
    factors generally need emissions on a mass/activity basis (i.e., grams 
    per mile). This necessitates the use of conversion factors to adjust g/
    bhp-hr emissions to g/mi. These conversion factors will be updated for 
    MOBILE6. In addition, plans are to expand the number of vehicle 
    categories for which specific emission factors are estimated by the 
    model, replacing ``heavy-duty gas vehicle'' and ``heavy-duty diesel 
    vehicle'' emission factors with estimates specific to a number of 
    subcategories (e.g., by GVW class, with buses treated separately), 
    EPA's plans for revisions in these areas will be presented and 
    discussed.
    
    Fleet Characteristics
    
        In order to model emission factors for the entire in-use fleet of 
    highway vehicles, information on the total numbers of vehicles by 
    vehicle type, the registration distributions by age of each vehicle 
    type, and the annual mileage accumulation rates by age of each vehicle 
    type are required. Wile modelers often substitute locality-specific 
    data for the national data that is included in MOBILE, particularly for 
    registration distributions by age, it is still important for national 
    modeling and estimation of the impact of new rules, standards, and test 
    procedures to update these types of information periodically. EPA has 
    retained a contractor to develop more recent information on fleet 
    characteristics, including detailed information on the various 
    subclasses of heavy-duty gas and diesel vehicles, and buses, for use in 
    MOBILE6. A progress
    
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    report on results to date and plans for incorporating such data into 
    MOBILE6 will be presented and discussed.
    
    Real-Time Diurnal Emissions
    
        For gasoline-fueled vehicle types, non-exhaust emissions are a 
    significant portion of total emissions of volatile organic compounds 
    (VOC). Non-exhaust, or evaporative, emissions consist of diurnal 
    emissions, hot soak (trip-end) emissions, refueling emissions, and 
    running and resting losses. Diurnal emissions, generated during times 
    that a vehicle is not being driven and ambient temperatures are 
    increasing, have in the past been based on data obtained during one-
    hour forced heat builds, with the temperature increase representative 
    of an entire eight-hour period being performed over one hour. More 
    recent testing has shown that if the emissions are measured over longer 
    periods of time, more representative of the rate and duration of 
    temperature increases actually experienced by in-use vehicles, the 
    results are not the same. To improve the accuracy of diurnal emissions 
    estimates, and to provide users with the ability to better model 
    emissions over shorter periods of time than full days (e.g., airshed 
    models typically require emissions on an hour-by-hour basis), MOBILE6 
    will incorporate so-called ``real time'' diurnal emissions estimates 
    and means of estimating such emissions over shorter time periods and 
    lesser temperature increases characteristic of such shorter times. 
    Plans for implementing this approach in MOBILE6 will be presented and 
    discussed.
    
    Liquids Leaks, Trip Characteristics
    
        Plans are for the new version of the model to have means of 
    explicitly accounting for, and estimating emissions due to evaporation 
    of, liquid leaks of fuel. Modeling liquid leaks explicitly in MOBILE 
    would have an impact on estimates for other nontailpipe emission 
    factors (diurnals, hot soaks, running and resting losses), as the 
    presumption is that liquid leaks, if and when encountered, have been 
    included within these other emission source categories. All of these 
    evaporative emission estimates are affected by trip characteristics, or 
    travel patterns, such as average number of trips per day, miles per 
    day, miles per trip, and so forth. EPA plans to have updated these trip 
    characteristics in MOBILE6 on the basis of analysis of data obtained 
    from instrumented vehicles.
        These are the main areas in which presentations are planned for the 
    first day of the workshop. Results of test programs and data analyses 
    will be presented where available, and in all subject areas plans for 
    additional work and proposed revisions to the model's treatment of each 
    area will be discussed.
    
    Topics To Be Discussed on March 20
    
        As noted above, the focus of the presentations and discussion on 
    the second day of the workshop will be more toward changes that impact 
    the input data requirements and file structure and on proposed output 
    changes. The second day will also include a presentation concerning 
    EPA's plans for development of a nonroad emission inventory model.
    
    Inspection/Maintenance (I/M) Programs and Credits
    
        One of the more important aspects of the model from the perspective 
    of many States and local/regional entities is the modeling of the 
    benefits of various types of periodic I/M programs. MOBILE5a__H was 
    released in 1995 to provide an interim tool for use in modeling certain 
    types of tests and combinations of programs that could not be modeled 
    adequately using MOBILE5a. The increasing variety of test types (e.g., 
    idle tests, IM240 tests, use of remote sensing devices in conjunction 
    with other I/M programs, the ASM and BAR90 tests), the tendency toward 
    greater use of multiple sets of cutpoints (based, for example, on age 
    of vehicle at time of test), and the frequency with which a given area 
    is using more than one type of I/M program, whether simultaneously or 
    sequentially, all suggest that there is a need for changes in how the 
    emission benefits resulting from such programs are estimated and 
    reflected in MOBILE emission factors. In MOBILE6, EPA is considering 
    significant changes to the means by which credits for I/M programs are 
    modeled. EPA will present proposals for changes in the modeling of I/M 
    programs for discussion and comment.
    
    Input/Output Structure Changes
    
        In past updates to the MOBILE model, EPA has made a strong effort 
    to maintain upward compatibility of input data files used to run the 
    model. That is, a MOBILE4.1 input file, for example, can be used to run 
    MOBILE5a, although some features of MOBILE5a have no corresponding 
    feature in MOBILE4.1. This has been accomplished through adding new 
    options as either (i) additional permitted values assigned to existing 
    control flags, or (ii) additional optional variables appended to the 
    end (right side) of existing input file lines, set up so that if they 
    are missing (as would be the case if an input file for an older MOBILE 
    version not having that feature) this in interpreted as ``new option 
    not to be included in modeling.'' The extent of changes planned and 
    proposed for MOBILE6 are such that it wil not longer be possible to 
    maintain this ``upward compatibility'' of input files. The output files 
    are also likely to change significantly.
        Because this is likely to be of great interest of State and local/
    regional modelers in particular, EPA will devote one presentation to 
    specifically outlining all of the input and output changes implied by 
    the model revisions noted above, as well as others not the subject of 
    specific presentations at this workshop. This information is still in 
    the proposal stage, and the input of and reaction from modelers at and 
    after the workshop will assist in determining the precise nature of 
    these changes in MOBILE6.
    
    Nonroad Model--Overview of Plans
    
        The final presentation at the workshop will not be directly related 
    to MOBILE6, but instead will present an overview of EPA's plans for the 
    development of a nonroad mobile source emission inventory (as versus 
    emission factor) model. Current nonroad inventory development practices 
    are based on EPA's Nonroad Engine and Vehicle Emissions Study (NEVES), 
    done under the 1990 Clean Air Act Amendment requirements, and 
    ``Procedures for Emission Inventory Preparation, Volume IV: Mobile 
    Sources (EPA-450/4-81-026d (revised), 1992). In consideration of the 
    increased recognition of the importance of emissions from nonroad 
    sources in terms of overall emissions and air quality, and the 
    considerable practical difficulty of implmenting the current guidance, 
    EPA is planning to develop a SIP-related nonroad emissions inventory 
    model to meet the needs of the modeling audidence. EPA will present its 
    plans and proposals for development of a nonroad mobile source emission 
    inventory model, and will be especially interested in input from 
    workshop attendees as to their needs and preferences for such a model. 
    Specifically, EPA would lke to know the types of locality-specific 
    input data (e.g., equipment populations) that users of such a model 
    would anticipate developing and using in order to customize nonroad 
    emission inventories for the geographic domain of interest. Such 
    information obtained at the workshop will assist EPA in determining the 
    best approaches to use
    
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    in a nonroad emission inventory model to maximize its utility.
    
    Additional Information
    
        To the extent possible, EPA will post material at the TTN BBS site 
    described under For further information contact above in advance of the 
    workshop. Those planning to attend, and those interested in following 
    the progress of workshop planning more closely, should periodically 
    visit the workshop information site. For example, some of the 
    presentation materials that will be used at the workshop will be posted 
    in advance to facilitate discussion and comment at the workshop.
    
        Dated: February 28, 1997.
    Mary D. Nichols,
    Assistant Administrator for Air and Radiation.
    [FR Doc. 97-5884 Filed 3-7-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6560-50-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
03/10/1997
Department:
Environmental Protection Agency
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of public workshop.
Document Number:
97-5884
Dates:
The workshop will be held Wednesday, March 19 and Thursday, March 20, 1997. The times are from 8:30 am to 5:00 pm March, and 8:30 am to 3:00 pm March 20. Al times are Eastern Standard Time.
Pages:
10849-10852 (4 pages)
Docket Numbers:
AMS-FRL-5699-8
PDF File:
97-5884.pdf