This document was developed for the Proposed Mandatory GHG Reporting Rule.
For the final document, please visit the final Mandatory Reporting of
Greenhouse Gases Rule.
Landfills &EPA
United Slates
Proposed Rule: Mandatory Reporting of Greenhouse Gases Environmental Protection
Under the proposed Mandatory Reporting of Greenhouse Gases (GHGs) rule, owners or
operators of facilities that contain municipal landfills (as defined below) or industrial landfills
(as defined below) would report emissions from landfills and all other source categories located
at the facility for which methods are defined in the rule. Owners or operators would collect
emission data; calculate GHG emissions; and follow the specified procedures for quality
assurance, missing data, recordkeeping, and reporting.
How Is This Source Category Defined?
Under the proposal, this source category consists of:
• Municipal solid waste landfills that generate methane (CFL^ in amounts equivalent to 25,000
metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) or more per year. Note that this definition is
based on the amount of QrU generated (regardless of whether any gas is collected and destroyed)
instead of on the amount of Clr^ actually emitted.
• Industrial landfills at facilities that emit 25,000 metric tons of GHGs per year or more (expressed
as CO2e) from the landfill, combustion sources, miscellaneous use of carbonates, and other source
categories (see information sheet on General Provisions) located at the facility. The types of
facilities that contain industrial landfills that could be subject to this reporting rule include, but
are not limited to, the following:
o Pulp and paper mills
o Food processing plants
o Ethanol production plants
This source category does not include hazardous waste landfills or construction and demolition landfills.
What GHGs Would Be Reported?
For both municipal and industrial landfills, the proposal calls for facilities to report:
• Annual CFI4 generation and CFI4 emissions from the landfill.
• Annual CFI4 destruction (for landfills with gas collection and control systems).
• Annual CO2, CFI4, and nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions from stationary fuel combustion devices
using the calculation methods specified in 40 CFR part 98, subpart C (General Stationary
Combustion Sources). The information sheet on general stationary fuel combustion sources
summarizes the proposal for calculating and reporting emissions from these units. For landfill gas
flares, report:
o CFI4 and N2O emissions from combustion of landfill gas and other fuels (e.g., natural gas
or other fuels used for pilot gas or to supplement the heating value of landfill gas).
o CO2 emissions only from combustion of fuels other than landfill gas (e.g., natural gas or
other fuels used for pilot gas or to supplement the heating value of landfill gas). CO2
emissions from the landfill gas destroyed in the flare would not be reported.
How Would GHG Emissions Be Calculated?
March 2009 1 EPA-430-F-09-009
-------
This document was developed for the Proposed Mandatory GHG Reporting Rule.
For the final document, please visit the final Mandatory Reporting of
Greenhouse Gases Rule.
Under the proposal, all facilities would calculate modeled annual CH4 generation based on:
• Measured or estimated values of historic annual waste disposal quantities; and
• Appropriate values for model inputs (i.e., degradable organic carbon fraction in the waste,
generation rate constant). Default parameter values are specified for bulk municipal waste,
individual waste constituents, and various industrial waste.
Facilities that do not collect and destroy landfill gas would adjust the modeled annual CFLj generation to
account for soil oxidation (CUt that is converted to CO2 as it passes through the landfill cover before
being emitted) using a default soil oxidation factor. The resulting value would be reported and represents
both CFLt generation and CFLt emissions.
Facilities that collect and control landfill gas would calculate the annual quantity of CFi4 recovered and
destroyed based on continuous monitoring of landfill gas flow rate, CFt^ concentration, temperature, and
pressure of the collected gas prior to the destruction device. CFi4 destruction efficiency would be based on
the manufacturer's specified efficiency or 99 percent, whichever is less.
Those facilities that collect and control landfill gas would then calculate CFi4 emissions in two ways and
report both results. Emissions would be calculated by:
1 . Subtracting the measured amount of CFi4 recovered from the modeled annual CFi4 generation
(with adjustments for soil oxidation and destruction efficiency of the destruction device).
2. Applying a gas collection efficiency to the measured amount of CFi4 recovered to account for
CFi4 that is emitted through the landfill surface (adjusted for soil oxidation). A default
collection efficiency of 75 percent is specified, but landfills should use a collection efficiency
that takes into account collection system coverage, operation, and landfill cover materials.
What Information Would Be Reported?
In addition to the information required by the General Provisions at 40 CFR 98.3(c), the proposal calls for
each facility to report the following landfill information:
• Annual CFI4 generation.
• Annual CFI4 emissions (facilities with landfill gas collection and control systems would report
emissions using both of two estimation methodologies described above and would also report
annual CFI4 destruction by the destruction device).
• Annual waste disposal for each year of landfilling and how it was estimated.
• Waste composition data, if available, and how these data were estimated.
• Values of all parameters used in the calculations.
• For landfill gas collection systems, measured annual gas flow rate, measured CFI4 concentration,
and monthly average measured temperature and pressure.
• For landfill gas destruction devices, the destruction efficiency.
• The gas collection efficiency used in emissions calculations and how it was determined.
• Descriptions of landfill characteristics that influence collection efficiency such as type of cover,
acreage and quantity of waste covered by intermediate or final cap, and number of gas collection
wells.
For More Information
This series of information sheets is intended to assist reporting facilities/owners in understanding key
provisions of the proposed rule. However, these information sheets are not intended to be a substitution
March 2009 2 EPA-430-F-09-009
-------
This document was developed for the Proposed Mandatory GHG Reporting Rule.
For the final document, please visit the final Mandatory Reporting of
Greenhouse Gases Rule.
for the rule. Visit EPA's Web site (www.epa.gov/climatechange/emissions/ghgrulemaking.html) for more
information, including the proposed preamble and rule and additional information sheets on specific
industries, or go to to access the rulemaking docket (EPA-HQ OAR-2008-0508).
For questions that cannot be answered through the Web site or docket, call 1-877-GHG-l 188.
March 2009 3 EPA-430-F-09-009
------- |