Energy efficiency and greenhouse gas emission intensity of petroleum products at U.S. refineries

Elgowainy, A; Han, J; Cai, H; Wang, M; Forman, GS; Divita, VB

HERO ID

8745336

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2014

Language

English

PMID

24869918

HERO ID 8745336
In Press No
Year 2014
Title Energy efficiency and greenhouse gas emission intensity of petroleum products at U.S. refineries
Authors Elgowainy, A; Han, J; Cai, H; Wang, M; Forman, GS; Divita, VB
Journal Environmental Science & Technology
Volume 48
Issue 13
Page Numbers 7612-7624
Abstract This paper describes the development of (1) a formula correlating the variation in overall refinery energy efficiency with crude quality, refinery complexity, and product slate; and (2) a methodology for calculating energy and greenhouse gas (GHG) emission intensities and processing fuel shares of major U.S. refinery products. Overall refinery energy efficiency is the ratio of the energy present in all product streams divided by the energy in all input streams. Using linear programming (LP) modeling of the various refinery processing units, we analyzed 43 refineries that process 70% of total crude input to U.S. refineries and cover the largest four Petroleum Administration for Defense District (PADD) regions (I, II, III, V). Based on the allocation of process energy among products at the process unit level, the weighted-average product-specific energy efficiencies (and ranges) are estimated to be 88.6% (86.2%-91.2%) for gasoline, 90.9% (84.8%-94.5%) for diesel, 95.3% (93.0%-97.5%) for jet fuel, 94.5% (91.6%-96.2%) for residual fuel oil (RFO), and 90.8% (88.0%-94.3%) for liquefied petroleum gas (LPG). The corresponding weighted-average, production GHG emission intensities (and ranges) (in grams of carbon dioxide-equivalent (CO2e) per megajoule (MJ)) are estimated to be 7.8 (6.2-9.8) for gasoline, 4.9 (2.7-9.9) for diesel, 2.3 (0.9-4.4) for jet fuel, 3.4 (1.5-6.9) for RFO, and 6.6 (4.3-9.2) for LPG. The findings of this study are key components of the life-cycle assessment of GHG emissions associated with various petroleum fuels; such assessment is the centerpiece of legislation developed and promulgated by government agencies in the United States and abroad to reduce GHG emissions and abate global warming.
Doi 10.1021/es5010347
Pmid 24869918
Wosid WOS:000338488700052
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Comments Scopus URL: https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84903736240&doi=10.1021%2fes5010347&partnerID=40&md5=373feef431f417f842fe4044780e0443
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Is Peer Review Yes