Greenhouse Reviews

Why Greenhouse Gas (Ghg) Tracking Was Mandated By The Us Epa
Greenhouse Gas (GHG) tracking and reporting will soon become mandatory in the United States, with the first reports due in early 2011 for the emissions data collected for the 2010 calendar year. The proposed federal law affects businesses and governments with heating, ventilation and air conditioning systems or refrigeration and air-conditioning systems, as well as those who produce industrial chemicals, fossil fuels, cars and engines, and any organization consuming electricity. It is the responsibility of companies to review and comply with the new EPA GHG regulations or face substantial fines down the road.
The Climate Registry Protocol outlines GHG tracking, defining further the requirements in the mandated GHG tracking and monitoring. The fundamental ideas stimulating GHG reporting are part of the U.S. Clean Air Act, aimed at improving air quality and lowering greenhouse gas emissions.
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) proposes mandatory reporting of the gases contributing to global climate change from about 13,000 facilities nationwide. Such facilities are accounted to be the major contributors of GHG emissions in the US, which is a very logical starting point in the greehouse gas emissions reduction targets. Such regulation covers companies and organizations which release relatively large amounts of GHG or those which produce or import industrial chemicals and fuels which emit high carbon gases when burned.
One of the major focuses of the Greenhouse Gas tracking protocol is refrigerant gases used in refrigeration and cooling systems by numerous facilities, including manufacturers, food processors, retailers, grocery stores, office buildings, municipalities and hospitals, just to name a few. Because of their chemical makeup, refrigerant gases contain significant levels of carbon in the form of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs) and perfluorocarbons (PFCs). Such compounds are regulated in use.S. Clean Air Act for several years.
Greenhouse gases absorb and release radiation into the atmosphere, setting off a global warming effect on earth. The purpose of Greenhouse Gas tracking is to pinpoint the main origins of greenhouse gases and monitor the amount discharged into the atmosphere. This helps environmental officials establish a baseline which will be the benchmark for all usage and evaluation practices in the future. With this accurate information, it can be determined if the guidelines are effective in lowering the harmful effects of these substances to the ozone layer.
Greenhouse Gas tracking will enable enterprises to measure direct and indirect GHG emissions and be equipped with the data needed to properly use, maintain, contain and dispose leaks. Heating and cooling systems, as well as other energy consumption, are defined as direct emissions.
Greenhouse Gas tracking was among the major goals of the Obama administration as the United States aims to protect the future of the environment by reducing the carbon footprint of today. By taking no action, the earth’s makeup would significantly change, with humans and animals adversely affected and marine and plant life severely damaged.
Greenhouse Gas tracking will become law because it was determined that certain manmade compounds contribute substantially to global warming. The substances are carbon dioxide, chlorine, bromine, nitrous oxide, chloroflurocarbons, hydrofluorocarbons, methane, methyl bromide, methyl chloroform, sulfur hexafluoride, hydroxyl, perfluorocarbobs, halons, carbon tetrachloride, fluorine, and the fluorinated gases hydrofluorinated ethers and nitrogen trifluoride. This compulsory law aims to reduce the use of harmful substances to help curtail the already felt adverse effects of global warming.
Although Greenhouse Gas tracking was optional for large emitters in the United States, it becomes mandatory in 2010 with the regulation requiring companies and municipalities to submit exact information on how much of the global warming substances they use everyday and if any leaks occurred.
The requirements are so extensive that vendors who are knowledgeable in the area have developed software programs and web-based applications to assist companies in complying with the law across distributed facilities down to the individual asset level.
About the Author
Enterprise Carbon Accounting
(ECA) – Emissions management is an essential requirement for today’s organization. It will become a legal necessity due to government mandates that require tracking of greenhouse gases (GHGs) across an organization’s complete boundary. Learn about Sustainability Resource Planning (SRP) software from Verisae at
http://www.verisae.com/articles
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