Abstract
BackgroundRoad transport is an important contributor to the European Union’s total greenhouse gas emissions. This study aims at summarizing methane (CH4) and nitrous oxide (N2O) exhaust emissions from L-category, light-duty and heavy-duty vehicles in the European Union. The assessment is based on measurements carried out in the Vehicle Emission Laboratory of the Joint Research Centre between 2009 and 2019. The exhaust chemical composition from a fleet of 38 L-category vehicles Euro 1 to Euro 4 (2- and 3-wheelers, small quadricycles such as quads and minicars), 63 light-duty vehicles from Euro 5b to Euro 6d-TEMP (passenger cars, including hybrid vehicles), and 27 light commercial and heavy-duty vehicles from pre-Euro I to Euro VI (including lorries, buses and garbage trucks) was analyzed by Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy.ResultsCH4 emission factors monitored were from 1 to 234 mg/km for L-category vehicles (mean: 39 mg/km), from 0.1 to 40 mg/km for light-duty vehicles (mean: 7 mg/km), and from non-detectable to 320 mg/km for heavy-duty vehicles (mean: 19 mg/km). N2O emission factors monitored were from non-detectable to 5 mg/km for L-category vehicles (mean: 1 mg/km), from non-detectable to 40 mg/km for light-duty vehicles (mean: 7 mg/km), and from non-detectable to 118 mg/km for heavy-duty vehicles (mean: 19 mg/km). According to the 100-year Global Warming Potential of these greenhouse gases, these emissions corresponded to a range from negligible up to 9 g/km of CO2-equivalent for CH4 and from negligible up to 32 g/km of CO2-equivalent for N2O.ConclusionsThe higher contributors of CH4 were the two-stroke mopeds included in the L-category vehicles, while the higher emissions of N2O were found in the modern (Euro 5–6 or Euro V–VI) diesel light- and heavy-duty vehicles. Among them, vehicles complying with Euro 6 and Euro VI standard were associated to higher N2O emissions compared to those associated to Euro 5 and pre-Euro IV standards, which could be attributed to the introduction of the after-treatment systems designed to fulfill more stringent NOx standards. These updated emission factors and unique on its kind database represent a source of information for legislators and modelers to better assess the greenhouse gas emission reduction in the EU transport sector.
Highlights
Road transport is an important contributor to the European Union’s total greenhouse gas emissions
As this study aimed at investigating the realistic greenhouse gases (GHG) emissions from in-use vehicles, the value provided a good indication of what can be expected from the illegal practice of tampering L-category vehicles (L-cat) vehicles to obtain more delivered power
Regarding the vehicles fueled with diesel, the range of methane emission factors was relatively lower compared to the other L-cats, with a maximum emission factor of 5 mg/km
Summary
Road transport is an important contributor to the European Union’s total greenhouse gas emissions. This study aims at summarizing methane (CH4) and nitrous oxide (N2O) exhaust emissions from L-category, light-duty and heavy-duty vehicles in the European Union. Methane (CH4) and nitrous oxide (N2O) are long-lived greenhouse gases (GHG), with atmospheric lifetimes of 12 and 121 years, respectively. Considering their radiative forcing, CH4 and N2O have a 100-year time horizon global warming potentials (GWP) of 28 and 265 C O2 equivalent (CO2-eq), respectively [41]. In the European Union (EU), GHG emissions decreased in the majority of anthropogenic sectors between 1990 and 2014, road transport is still associated to the largest increase of C O2 in this period with a growth of 124 MT, and 7 MT between 2013 and 2014 [28]. 73% of the GHG emissions from transport sector in EU-28 came from the road sector in 2015, which represented ca. 19% of the total GHG emissions in the EU-28 [27]
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