Appendix E
Calculation Methods Appendix Part II.C.3.c and II.C.3.d
II.C.3.c Scope 2 Emissions for Facilities with Direct-Line Connections
A small number of facilities reported purchasing electricity
through a direct-line connection. As discussed in chapter 3 (“Scope 2
Emissions”), this is a rare sourcing arrangement where electricity can flow
directly from the electricity generation unit to the facility without first
flowing through the transmission and distribution grid.537F
Electricity sourced through a direct-line connection is the only time that the
primary scope 2 calculations do not use eGRID subregional emissions factors for
purchased electricity. These two pieces of the scope 2 electricity emissions
calculations are shown in figure E.2 and described in more detail below.
Figure
E.2 Mapping of scope 2 electricity emissions to subprocess-specific
estimates
Source: Compiled by the USITC.
Note: The “Q” labels in the diagram
above indicate the question number in the Commission’s facility-level
questionnaire gathering this information. USITC, Greenhouse Gas (GHG)
Emissions Intensities Questionnaire: Facility-Level, 2024, sections 3-4.
The questionnaire requested data on direct-line connections
across two questions. Question 4.4b covered the quantity of energy attribute
certificates (e.g., renewable energy certificates) associated with a
zero-emission source of energy that were bundled with electricity supplied via
a direct-line connection ( ).538F
Question 4.5 covered plant-specific contractual arrangements with plants that
did not receive energy attribute certificates and included data on the quantity
of electricity that was supplied via a direct-line connection ( ). Using the non-certificate electricity data
from question 4.5 and an emissions factor specific to the plant in eGRID ( ), equation E.31 estimates emissions
associated with purchases made through direct-line connections ( ).539F
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To separate direct-line connection purchases from all other
electricity purchases ( ), equation E.32 removes electricity purchases
and from total electricity purchases reported in
question 4.1.540F
Equation E.33 accounts for emissions from all other
electricity purchases (applying the same subregional emissions factor covered
in the simple version of the calculations).541F
Finally, equation E.34 combines the direct-line connection emissions with
non-direct line (grid) purchase emissions and allocates them to associated
subprocesses using electricity use quantities provided in question 3.9.
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II.C.3.d Scope 2 Emissions for Facilities with Purchases of Useful Thermal
Outputs
For this investigation’s survey population, purchases of
steam, heat, or hot water (useful thermal outputs or UTO) from a third party
were rare but sometimes associated with significant quantities of emissions.542F
The Commission collected data on these purchases of useful thermal outputs in
question 4.7 and used eGRID data on cogeneration plants to determine how much
of the supplying cogeneration plant’s emissions to assign to the purchased
useful thermal output. The key aspects of this calculation are shown in figure
E.3, below. When useful thermal output was purchased from a boiler or a source
that was otherwise unavailable in eGRID, facility contacts were requested to
provide the emissions factor that their company used for the purchased useful
thermal output in company-level emissions accounting.543F
Figure
E.3 Mapping of scope 2 useful thermal output emissions from
cogeneration plants to subprocess-specific estimates
Source: Compiled by the USITC.
Note: The “Q” labels in the diagram
above indicate the question number in the Commission’s facility-level
questionnaire gathering this information. USITC, Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Emissions Intensities Questionnaire: Facility-Level,
2024, sections 3-4.
The questionnaire allowed respondents to report purchases of
useful thermal outputs in three different units: megawatt-hours (MWh) used to
generate the output, in gigajoules of output, or in MMBtu of output. When these
thermal outputs were purchased from a cogeneration plant in the eGRID database,
the calculations converted the purchased quantities to MMBtu.544F
Equation E.35 uses the ratio of the purchased MMBtu of useful thermal output
reported in question 4.7 ( ) to total useful thermal output from the
plant in eGRID ( ) to estimate the share of the plant’s useful
thermal outputs purchased by the facility ( ).545F
Equation E.36 separately estimates the scope 2 emissions associated with the
facility’s purchased steam, heat, and hot water .
To do this, the equation multiplies the share of useful thermal output
purchased from the plant by the ratio of non-electric outputs to electric
outputs(measured by dividing the complement of the plant’s electric allocation
factor by the electric allocation factor) and by the plant’s total CO2e
emissions allocated to electricity generation in eGRID ( ).546F
These calculations were run separately for each pairing of useful thermal
output and source plant reported in question 4.7 and then totaled for each useful
thermal output.
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Next, equations E.37.a and E.37.b determined what share of
each thermal output was used on-site rather than sold. As denoted in equation
E.37.a, if the facility sold more of a useful thermal output than it purchased,
the scope 2 share was set to zero, and the scope 1 emissions associated with
generating the useful thermal output were reduced by the share of net sales.
Most facilities did not both purchase and sell useful thermal output, so the
scope 2 share ( ) often has a value of 1.
Equations E.38-E.40 applied this share and the thermal
output-specific scope 2 emissions to subprocesses using the percent shares
reported in questions 3.10, 3.11, and 3.12, respectively. Finally, equation
E.41 combined these scope 2 emissions with the scope 2 emissions from purchased
electricity to estimate scope 2 emissions for each subprocess ).
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From this point in the calculations, the allocation of any
emissions from ambient heating and the aggregation of subprocesses to unit
process emissions for scope 2 energy follow the same steps as with simpler
facilities (equations E.11E.13).
These final steps yield scope 2 energy unit process emissions ( for the product-level emissions inventories.