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Climate and health relevant emissions from in-use Indian three-wheelers fueled by natural gas and gasoline.
Environ Sci Technol. 2011 Mar 15; 45(6):2406-12.ES

Abstract

Auto-rickshaws in India use different fuels and engine technologies, with varying emissions and implications for air quality and climate change. Chassis dynamometer emission testing was conducted on 30 in-use auto-rickshaws to quantify the impact of switching from gasoline to compressed natural gas (CNG) in spark-ignition engines. Thirteen test vehicles had two-stroke CNG engines (CNG-2S) and 17 had four-stroke CNG engines (CNG-4S), of which 11 were dual-fuel and operable on a back-up gasoline (petrol) system (PET-4S). Fuel-based emission factors were determined for gaseous pollutants (CO(2), CH(4), NO(X), THC, and CO) and fine particulate matter (PM(2.5)). Intervehicle variability was high, and for most pollutants there was no significant difference (95% confidence level) between "old" (1998-2001) and "new" (2007-2009) age-groups within a given fuel-technology class. Mean fuel-based PM(2.5) emission factor (mean (95% confidence interval)) for CNG-2S (14.2 g kg(-1) (6.2-26.7)) was almost 30 times higher than for CNG-4S (0.5 g kg(-1) (0.3-0.9)) and 12 times higher than for PET-4S (1.2 g kg(-1) (0.8-1.7)). Global warming commitment associated with emissions from CNG-2S was more than twice that from CNG-4S or PET-4S, due mostly to CH(4) emissions. Comprehensive measurements and data should drive policy interventions rather than assumptions about the impacts of clean fuels.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability, University of British Columbia, 2202 Main Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

21322628

Citation

Reynolds, Conor C O., et al. "Climate and Health Relevant Emissions From In-use Indian Three-wheelers Fueled By Natural Gas and Gasoline." Environmental Science & Technology, vol. 45, no. 6, 2011, pp. 2406-12.
Reynolds CC, Grieshop AP, Kandlikar M. Climate and health relevant emissions from in-use Indian three-wheelers fueled by natural gas and gasoline. Environ Sci Technol. 2011;45(6):2406-12.
Reynolds, C. C., Grieshop, A. P., & Kandlikar, M. (2011). Climate and health relevant emissions from in-use Indian three-wheelers fueled by natural gas and gasoline. Environmental Science & Technology, 45(6), 2406-12. https://doi.org/10.1021/es102430p
Reynolds CC, Grieshop AP, Kandlikar M. Climate and Health Relevant Emissions From In-use Indian Three-wheelers Fueled By Natural Gas and Gasoline. Environ Sci Technol. 2011 Mar 15;45(6):2406-12. PubMed PMID: 21322628.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Climate and health relevant emissions from in-use Indian three-wheelers fueled by natural gas and gasoline. AU - Reynolds,Conor C O, AU - Grieshop,Andrew P, AU - Kandlikar,Milind, Y1 - 2011/02/15/ PY - 2011/2/17/entrez PY - 2011/2/17/pubmed PY - 2011/5/20/medline SP - 2406 EP - 12 JF - Environmental science & technology JO - Environ Sci Technol VL - 45 IS - 6 N2 - Auto-rickshaws in India use different fuels and engine technologies, with varying emissions and implications for air quality and climate change. Chassis dynamometer emission testing was conducted on 30 in-use auto-rickshaws to quantify the impact of switching from gasoline to compressed natural gas (CNG) in spark-ignition engines. Thirteen test vehicles had two-stroke CNG engines (CNG-2S) and 17 had four-stroke CNG engines (CNG-4S), of which 11 were dual-fuel and operable on a back-up gasoline (petrol) system (PET-4S). Fuel-based emission factors were determined for gaseous pollutants (CO(2), CH(4), NO(X), THC, and CO) and fine particulate matter (PM(2.5)). Intervehicle variability was high, and for most pollutants there was no significant difference (95% confidence level) between "old" (1998-2001) and "new" (2007-2009) age-groups within a given fuel-technology class. Mean fuel-based PM(2.5) emission factor (mean (95% confidence interval)) for CNG-2S (14.2 g kg(-1) (6.2-26.7)) was almost 30 times higher than for CNG-4S (0.5 g kg(-1) (0.3-0.9)) and 12 times higher than for PET-4S (1.2 g kg(-1) (0.8-1.7)). Global warming commitment associated with emissions from CNG-2S was more than twice that from CNG-4S or PET-4S, due mostly to CH(4) emissions. Comprehensive measurements and data should drive policy interventions rather than assumptions about the impacts of clean fuels. SN - 1520-5851 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/21322628/Climate_and_health_relevant_emissions_from_in_use_Indian_three_wheelers_fueled_by_natural_gas_and_gasoline_ L2 - https://doi.org/10.1021/es102430p DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -