Evaluating natural gas emissions from pneumatic controllers from upstream oil and gas facilities in West Virginia

被引:4
作者
Footer, Tracey L. [1 ]
Thoma, Eben D. [2 ]
Clark, Nigel [3 ]
Johnson, Derek [3 ]
Nash, Jennifer [1 ]
Herndon, Scott C. [4 ]
机构
[1] Eastern Res Grp Inc, 601 Keystone Pk Dr,Suite 700, Morrisville, NC 27560 USA
[2] US EPA, Ctr Environm Measurement & Modeling, Off Res & Dev, Res Triangle Pk, NC 27711 USA
[3] West Virginia Univ, Mech & Aerosp Engn, POB 6106, Morgantown, WV 26506 USA
[4] Aerodyne, 45 Manning Rd, Billerica, MA 01821 USA
关键词
Methane emissions; Pneumatic controller emissions; Oil and natural gas production; Greenhouse gases; Volatile organic compounds; VOLATILE ORGANIC-COMPOUNDS; METHANE EMISSIONS; WELL PADS; LEAK;
D O I
10.1016/j.aeaoa.2022.100199
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
In April of 2018, an optical gas imaging (OGI) and full flow sampler (FFS) emissions measurement study of pneumatic controllers (PCs) was conducted at 15 oil and natural gas production sites in West Virginia. The objective of the study was to identify and characterize PC systems with excessive emissions caused by mainte-nance issues or nonoptimized process conditions. A total of 391 PC systems were found on the sites and all were classified by the operator as snap-acting (on/off) intermittent venting PCs (IPCs) that should exhibit little gas release while the PC is closed between actuation events. The population was comprised of two groups, 259 infrequently actuating, lower emitting (LE) IPCs and 132 gas processing unit (GPU) liquid level IPCs and asso-ciated dump valve actuators that vent more frequently and have larger emission volumes. Using a PC-specific OGI inspection protocol with an assumed whole gas OGI detection threshold of 2.0 scfh, only 2 out of 259 LE-IPCs exhibited OGI detectable emissions indicating good inspection and maintenance practices for this category. Due to combined (ganged) GPU exhaust vents, the OGI inspection of the GPU liquid level IPCs was comparatively less informative and determination of single component IPC emissions by the FFS was more difficult. The time resolved FFS measurements of GPU IPCs defined three categories of operation: one that indicated proper function and two associated with higher emissions that may result from an IPC maintenance or process issues. The overall GPU IPC emission distribution was heavy tailed, with a median value of 12.8 scfh, similar to the 13.5 scfh whole gas IPC emission factor (EF). Total emissions were dominated by non-optimal temporal profile high-emitter IPC cases with the top 20% of IPC systems accounting for between 51.3% and 70.7% of GPU liquid level IPC emissions by volume. The uncertainty in the estimate was due to the ganged nature of the GPU exhaust vents. The highest GPU IPC emission came from a single malfunctioning unit with a measured whole gas value of 157 scfh. Up to six IPCs exceeded 100 scfh. An analysis of FFS emission mea-surements compared to liquids production per IPC unit employed indicated that production sites operating at a high level of liquids production test the limits of the site engineering, likely resulting in higher IPC emissions. Overall, this study found that the LE-IPCs with OGI-verified low closed bleed rates may emit well below the IPC EF while GPU liquid level IPC systems are likely well represented by the current IPC EF. IPCs that are experi-encing a maintenance or process issue or that are operating at sites with a very high product throughput per IPC employed can emit at rates exceeding ten times IPC EF.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 30 条
[1]   Methane Emissions from Process Equipment at Natural Gas Production Sites in the United States: Pneumatic Controllers [J].
Allen, David T. ;
Pacsi, Adam P. ;
Sullivan, David W. ;
Zavala-Araiza, Daniel ;
Harrison, Matthew ;
Keen, Kindal ;
Fraser, Matthew P. ;
Hill, A. Daniel ;
Sawyer, Robert F. ;
Seinfeld, John H. .
ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 2015, 49 (01) :633-640
[2]   Assessment of methane emissions from the US oil and gas supply chain [J].
Alvarez, Ramon A. ;
Zavala-Araiza, Daniel ;
Lyon, David R. ;
Allen, David T. ;
Barkley, Zachary R. ;
Brandt, Adam R. ;
Davis, Kenneth J. ;
Herndon, Scott C. ;
Jacob, Daniel J. ;
Karion, Anna ;
Kort, Eric A. ;
Lamb, Brian K. ;
Lauvaux, Thomas ;
Maasakkers, Joannes D. ;
Marchese, Anthony J. ;
Omara, Mark ;
Pacala, Stephen W. ;
Peischl, Jeff ;
Robinson, Allen L. ;
Shepson, Paul B. ;
Sweeney, Colm ;
Townsend-Small, Amy ;
Wofsy, Steven C. ;
Hamburg, Steven P. .
SCIENCE, 2018, 361 (6398) :186-188
[3]  
[Anonymous], 2020, INVENTORY US GREENHO
[4]   Ambient volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in Calgary, Alberta: Sources and screening health risk assessment [J].
Bari, Md. Aynul ;
Kindzierski, Warren B. .
SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2018, 631-632 :627-640
[5]   Assessment of volatile organic compound and hazardous air pollutant emissions from oil and natural gas well pads using mobile remote and on-site direct measurements [J].
Brantley, Halley L. ;
Thoma, Eben D. ;
Eisele, Adam P. .
JOURNAL OF THE AIR & WASTE MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION, 2015, 65 (09) :1072-1082
[6]  
Colorado Department of Public Health & Environment, 2022, APPR INSTR MON METH
[7]  
DAntoni M., 2018, LEVEL CONTROLLER EMI
[8]  
Daube C., QUANTIFICATION NATUR
[9]   Volatile organic compounds at two oil and natural gas production well pads in Colorado and Texas using passive samplers [J].
Eisele, Adam P. ;
Mukerjee, Shaibal ;
Smith, Luther A. ;
Thoma, Eben D. ;
Whitaker, Donald A. ;
Oliver, Karen D. ;
Wu, Tai ;
Colon, Maribel ;
Alston, Lillian ;
Cousett, Tamira A. ;
Miller, Michael C. ;
Smith, Donald M. ;
Stallings, Casson .
JOURNAL OF THE AIR & WASTE MANAGEMENT ASSOCIATION, 2016, 66 (04) :412-419
[10]  
EPA U.S., 2021, EPA PROP NEW SOURC P