M00007115
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CALCULATION WORKBOOK FOR OIL AND GAS PRODUCTION EQUIPMENT FUGITIVE EMISSIONS
American Petroleum Institute
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Availability date: 10/27/2021
1 AN INTRODUCTION TO FUGITIVE HYDROCARBON EMISSIONS
What are fugitive hydrocarbon emissions?
What are emission factors?
What are correlation equations?
How are fugitive hydrocarbon emissions quantified?
How do I calculate fugitive hydrocarbon emissions
from my site
2 METHODS OF CALCULATING FUGITIVE HYDROCARBON EMISSIONS
Method 1. The EPA Average Emission Factor Method
Method 2. The EPA Screening Value Range Emission
Factor Method
Method 3. The EPA Default Zero Factor, Correlation
Equation, and Pegged Source Factor Method
Method 4. The Leak Quantification Method
Comparison of Results
3 METHOD 1 - USING EPA AVERAGE EMISSION FACTORS TO
CALCULATE FUGITIVE HYDROCARBON EMISSIONS
4 METHOD 2 - USING EPA SCREENING VALUE RANGE EMISSION
FACTORS TO CALCULATE FUGITIVE HYDROCARBON EMISSIONS
5 METHOD 3 - USING EPA DEFAULT ZERO FACTORS,
CORRELATION EQUATIONS, AND PEGGED SOURCE FACTORS TO
CALCULATE FUGITIVE HYDROCARBON EMISSIONS
6 METHOD 4 - USING LEAK QUANTIFICATIONS TO CALCULATE
FUGITIVE HYDROCARBON EMISSIONS
7 COMPONENT SCREENING PROCEDURES
8 LEAK QUANTIFICATION PROCEDURES
The Vacuum Technique
The Blow-Through Technique
The High Flow System
9 DEFINITIONS
10 LIST OF REFERENCES
Result of five years of field testing of equipment components at production facilities across the United States, is a valuable tool for petroleum producers who are interested in estimating fugitive emissions from their oil and gas production sites. Four methods of calculating fugitive emissions are presented: EPA Average Emission Factor Method, EPA Screening Value Range Emission Method, EPA Correlation Method, and Leak Quantification Method.
Published | |
Document Type | Standard |
Status | Current |
Publisher | American Petroleum Institute |
Pages | |
ISBN |