National Atmospheric Emissions Inventory

2.2 CO2 Emission Estimates

2.2.1 Total CO2 emissions

Carbon dioxide emissions have reduced by around 15% since 1970, as shown in Figure 2.2. However, this decline has not been steady, and peaks were observed in 1973 and 1979 which were due, to the state of the economy, high oil prices and severe winters in these years. Emissions fell again during the early eighties reflecting the recession during this period and the coal miners strike of 1984. Since the mid-1980s the emissions profile has been much smoother showing an overall reduction in emissions.

The major emissions of carbon dioxide arise from the combustion of fossil fuels in power generation, and the transport, domestic and industrial sectors (Figure 2.2, Table 2.2). The level of emissions depends on the fuel mix and the fuel consumption data. Details of UK fuel consumption are given annually in the Department of Trade and Industry's Digest of United Kingdom Energy Statistics (DTI, 1997). The fuel consumption data used to calculate the pollutant emission totals in the NAEI is given in Table 2.3; fuels which are used as feedstocks are omitted (principally natural gas used for the production of ammonia, methanol and acetic acid and some use of LPG and OPG in petrochemical plants).

Table 2.2 UK Emissions of Carbon Dioxide as Carbon by UNECE1 Source Category and Fuel (Mt)

  1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1993 1994 1995 1996 1996%
By UNECE Source
Comb. in Energy Prod & Transf.
    Power Plant 57.0 56.5 58.3 51.9 54.1 45.5 44.3 44.0 43.4 28%
    Petroleum Refining Plants 5.2 5.2 5.6 4.7 4.9 5.6 5.6 5.7 5.8 4%
    Other Combs. & Trans. 8.2 3.5 2.8 3.9 3.9 3.9 4.4 4.7 5.2 3%
Comb. in Comm/Inst/Resid/Agri
    Domestic 26.5 22.6 23.3 24.2 21.5 24.2 22.9 21.7 24.7 16%
    Other 10.3 8.8 9.9 9.9 8.4 8.8 8.7 8.8 9.4 6%
Combustion in Industry 47.7 38.4 30.0 24.0 24.6 23.9 24.0 23.5 23.9 15%
Production Processes 4.9 5.1 4.2 4.7 4.0 2.8 3.3 3.1 3.2 2%
Extr./Distrib. of Fossil Fuels 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.3 0.4 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.2 0%
Solvent Use 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0%
Road Transport
    DERV 4.3 4.6 5.0 6.1 9.1 10.1 11.1 11.5 12.3 8%
    Petrol 11.7 13.3 15.9 17.1 20.4 20.0 19.2 18.4 18.8 12%
Other Transp & Mach.
    Off-Road 2.5 2.4 2.1 2.0 1.7 1.8 1.7 1.6 1.7 1%
    Other2 3.3 3.4 3.4 3.4 3.6 3.5 3.3 3.2 3.2 2%
Waste Treatment & Disp. 0.2 0.3 3.3 2.1 2.2 1.9 2.5 1.8 1.9 1%
Agricult/Forest/Land Use Change 0.5 0.5 0.4 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.3 0.4 0.4 0%
Nature 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0%
By Fuel
Solid 90.3 67.5 70.6 60.8 61.4 49.4 46.1 42.9 39.9 26%
Petroleum 67.5 65.6 58.0 54.5 56.6 56.5 55.3 53.9 55.1 36%
Gas 20.4 27.6 29.6 34.1 35.7 41.8 44.5 47.2 54.2 35%
Non-fuel 4.0 4.1 6.4 5.3 5.7 4.6 5.4 4.9 5.0 3%
Total 182.3 164.8 164.5 154.7 159.4 152.3 151.4 148.9 154.2 100%

1 UK emissions reported in IPCC format (Salway, 1998) differ slightly due to the different source categories used.
2 Railways, civil aircraft, shipping, naval vessels and military aircraft.

Figure 2.2 Time Series of CO2 Emissions

2.2.2 Electricity supply industry

The electricity supply industry is the major consumer of fossil fuels, and hence the major source of carbon dioxide emissions in the UK (Tables 2.2 and 2.3). There have been significant changes in the generating mix between 1980 and 1996, as shown in Figure 2.3. The level of CO2 emissions is determined by both the fuel mix and the generating technology used. During the 1970s the electricity supply industry was dominated by coal and fuel oil fired thermal power stations, and coal and oil consumption increased to meet the rising demand for electricity. The use of coal for generation peaked in 1980 at 89.6 Mt and has subsequently declined. The fall has not been steady showing minima in 1982 and 1984 due to recession in the early 1980s and the miners strike. During the late 1980s and early 1990s, the closure of inefficient plant led to an overall increase in the thermal efficiency of the conventional thermal power plants, and the contribution of nuclear power generation increased with the greater utilisation of existing nuclear plants and the commissioning of Sizewell B in 1991. The use of oil generation peaked in 1972 and apart from increased consumption during the miners strike of 1984 has been in decline ever since. Two oil-fired stations have been converted to burn Orimulsion® (an emulsion of bitumen and water) although this practice is in decline, largely on environmental grounds. More recently, the privatisation of the power industry has resulted in a move away from coal and oil generation towards combined cycle gas turbines (CCGT). The use of gas in power generation has increased by a factor of 29 since 1991. Further increases are expected as more CCGT stations come on line.

Table 2.3 UK Fuel Consumption

Fuel Consumer Units 1970 1980 1985 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996
                         
Coal Major Power Producers kt 77216 89569 73940 82555 82021 76989 64096 60650 57943 53423
Coal Industry kt 21540 8503 7806 7856 8059 8140 7358 6726 6146 5117
Coal Domestic kt 20142 8946 8636 4239 4778 4156 4639 3901 2690 2706
Coal Others kt 37888 16419 15005 13607 12656 11295 10634 10506 10169 10157
Other Solid Fuels All Consumers kt 25795 9793 11272 10298 9806 9416 9216 9019 8822 9534
Motor Spirit Road Transport kt 14235 19145 20403 24312 24021 24044 23766 22843 21953 22409
Gas Oil Road Transport kt 5035 5854 7106 10652 10694 11132 11806 12914 13457 14365
Gas Oil Industry kt 5059 4706 3452 2970 2901 2856 2918 2933 2846 3041
Gas Oil Others kt 7746 7842 7456 6216 6325 6256 6024 5773 5509 5820
Fuel Oil Major Power Producers kt 11903 6336 9509 6358 5542 4152 3272 2337 2225 2217
Fuel Oil Refineries kt 3533 3526 2188 2020 2217 2263 2356 2448 2318 2300
Fuel Oil Industry kt 20888 10594 4683 4402 4866 4833 4783 4356 3275 2699
Fuel Oil Others kt 7514 3882 2721 2479 2413 2517 2622 2470 2553 2528
Orimulsion Major Power Producers kt 0 0 0 155 418 1286 1416 1227 1276 872
Burning Oil Domestic kt 2018 1699 1403 1567 1825 1914 2037 2058 2101 2551
Burning Oil Others kt 4033 498 533 484 554 558 587 597 673 780
Aviation Turbine Fuel Air Transport kt 3481 4728 5036 6615 6200 6693 7133 7313 7689 8081
Petroleum Gases Refineries GWh 29336 31622 36253 42988 42460 42056 44863 46206 47897 49591
Petroleum Gases Others GWh 20515 18317 15650 15134 17655 15840 16333 17731 17754 19410
Other Petroleum Prod. All Consumers kt 672 1076 955 1023 1116 1122 1153 1022 1179 1172
Natural Gas Major Power Producers GWh 1758 1612 3693 88 202 11600 72901 105670 133066 176704
Natural Gas Industry GWh 20808 193896 200783 205602 200738 192685 198257 221741 232128 256472
Natural Gas Domestic GWh 18376 246766 283517 300398 333954 330115 340168 329705 326012 375834
Natural Gas Others GWh 64651 64124 83672 88546 104580 105470 105185 106797 116962 128944
Other Gases All Consumers GWh 205413 33000 36810 39781 38105 36026 35215 36214 36346 38328

Figure 2.3 Generating Mix (1980-1996) Million Tonnes Oil Equivalent.

The effect of these changes in the power sector are clearly reflected in the carbon dioxide emissions. Since 1970 there has been an increase in the electricity generated of around 42% but a large decrease in emissions of around 24%. More significantly, emissions have decreased by 20% between 1990 and 1996. This is due specifically to:


The overall effect of the fuel and technology changes are also clearly illustrated in Figure 2.4 which shows the average CO2 emission per kWh electricity generated decreases from 250 tonnes/GWh in 1970 to 134 tonnes/GWh in 1996. This trend are likely to continue into the future; although the 'dash for gas' has led the UK Government to undertake a review of energy sources for power generation which is considering issues such as fuel security and diversity.

Figure 2.4 Average CO2 Emissions ktonne/GWh Electricity Generated

2.2.3 Domestic

The domestic use of coal (including anthracite) shows an overall decline between 1970 and 1996, falling by 85%; domestic use of smokeless solid fuels (including coke) has also fallen significantly by around 77%. This reflects a trend away from solid fuels towards alternatives such as electricity and gas in sectors. Over the same period the domestic use of gas has increased by over a factor of 3.6.

2.2.4 Industrial

The industrial emissions have fallen by 50% since 1970. The curve exhibits peaks in 1973, 1979, and 1988 which are due in part to the cold winters in these years but mainly to the various levels of economic activity. According to DTI (1997), industrial energy consumption has declined since 1970 by 40% reflecting the decline in a number of the energy intensive industries and improvements in energy efficiency. Over this period, there has also been a marked move away from coal and oil consumption to gas and to a lesser extent electricity.

2.2.5 Transport

Total emissions from the transport sector have steadily increased since 1970. Of these road transport emissions have risen by 94% and currently accounts for around 86% of the total transport emissions or 20% of the total UK's carbon dioxide emissions. Although emissions fell a little during 1974-75 reflecting the increase in motor fuel prices after the oil crisis. The steady increase in fuel use by most forms of transport reflects the increased demand for transport in the UK between 1970 and 1996. The increased use of private motor vehicles has resulted in a 57% increase in the consumption of petrol. However, petrol consumption has declined by 8% since 1990 which is a result of the increase in popularity of diesel cars. Increased use of goods vehicles is reflected in the increase in DERV consumption by a factor of 2.9 since 1970.

2.2.6 Agriculture/forests/land use change

The effect of changing land-use can result in either net emission or net absorption of CO2 , particularly on a global scale. For example, forest clearing for agricultural use could be a net source of CO2. Recently the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change agreed new guidelines for preparing national inventories (IPCC, 1997). Land use change and forestry estimates are included in the UK Greenhouse Gas Inventory (Salway, 1998) for the years 1990-96. The estimates have yet to be included in the NAEI which covers the longer period 1970-1996. For comparative purposes the land use change estimates of carbon emissions and removals are summarised in Table 2.4 (Milne, 1997). The new guidelines for Land Use Change and Forestry include emissions from liming of soils under 'D CO2 Emissions and Removals from Soils'. These are already included in the NAEI under Agricultural Soils.

2.4 Emissions and Removals of Carbon Dioxide1 from Land Use Change and Forestry in 1996 (ktonnes)


Sources Emissions Removals
A Changes in Forest and Other Woody Biomass Stocks   10624
B Forest and Grassland conversion 2 24789  
C Abandonment of Managed Lands 3   7681
D CO2 Emissions and Removals from Soil 4 1515  
E Other 5 3667 367
Total 29971 18672

  1. Reported as ktonnes carbon dioxide according to IPCC Guidelines; 1 ktonne CO2 is equivalent to 0.27 ktonnes of carbon.
  2. Includes agricultural land use change. Net emission reported.
  3. Agricultural set-aside.
  4. CO2 emission arises from liming of soils. Agricultural soils could be a net sink of methane.
  5. Emission of CO2 is from wetland drainage and peat extraction. Removal arises from salt marshes.