New methodology for estimating biofuel consumption for cooking: Atmospheric emissions of black carbon and sulfur dioxide from India
DSpace at IIT Bombay
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Title |
New methodology for estimating biofuel consumption for cooking: Atmospheric emissions of black carbon and sulfur dioxide from India
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Creator |
HABIB, G
VENKATARAMAN, C SHRIVASTAVA, M BANERJEE, R STEHR, JW DICKERSON, RR |
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Subject |
ocean experiment
air-pollution chemical-characterization agricultural waste biomass fuels indoex 1999 level so2 combustion aerosol cookstoves aerosols emission inventory regional pollution |
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Description |
The dominance of biofuel combustion emissions in the Indian region, and the inherently large uncertainty in biofuel use estimates based on cooking energy surveys, prompted the current work, which develops a new methodology for estimating biofuel consumption for cooking. This is based on food consumption statistics, and the specific energy for food cooking. Estimated biofuel consumption in India was 379 (247-584) Tg yr(-1). New information on the user population of different biofuels was compiled at a state level, to derive the biofuel mix, which varied regionally and was 74:16:10%, respectively, of fuelwood, dung cake and crop waste, at a national level. Importantly, the uncertainty in biofuel use from quantitative error assessment using the new methodology is around 50%, giving a narrower bound than in previous works. From this new activity data and currently used black carbon emission factors, the black carbon ( BC) emissions from biofuel combustion were estimated as 220 (65-760) Gg yr(-1). The largest BC emissions were from fuelwood (75%), with lower contributions from dung cake (16%) and crop waste (9%). The uncertainty of 245% in the BC emissions estimate is now governed by the large spread in BC emission factors from biofuel combustion (122%), implying the need for reducing this uncertainty through measurements. Emission factors of SO2 from combustion of biofuels widely used in India were measured, and ranged 0.03-0.08 g kg(-1) from combustion of two wood species, 0.05-0.20 g kg(-1) from 10 crop waste types, and 0.88 g kg(-1) from dung cake, significantly lower than currently used emission factors for wood and crop waste. Estimated SO2 emissions from biofuels of 75 (36-160) Gg yr(-1) were about a factor of 3 lower than that in recent studies, with a large contribution from dung cake (73%), followed by fuelwood (21%) and crop waste ( 6%).
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Publisher |
AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
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Date |
2011-07-15T06:35:41Z
2011-12-26T12:49:18Z 2011-12-27T05:35:09Z 2011-07-15T06:35:41Z 2011-12-26T12:49:18Z 2011-12-27T05:35:09Z 2004 |
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Type |
Article
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Identifier |
GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES, 18(3), -
0886-6236 http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2003GB002157 http://dspace.library.iitb.ac.in/xmlui/handle/10054/4177 http://hdl.handle.net/10054/4177 |
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Language |
en
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