Moving Forward: Thanks to Jim Jetter’s EPA Lab!
Champion (2021) average energy emission factors (g/MJ) from ISO high, medium, and low tests.
Lab testing can quickly compare emissions from stoves. The EPA and ARC labs now measure the climate emission factors, not just PM2.5 and CO. It has been proven that only field tests show real world performance. Together, lab and field tests help to move stoves forward as we get closer to market driven stoves that please cooks, successfully cook food, use a lot less fuel, and protect health/climate.
The above chart contains a lot of information. Some takeaways are:
- Wow! The Three Stone Fire (TSF) was pretty bad! 943g/MJ for PM2.5, 15.5 g/MJ for CO.
- Charcoal made ~90% less PM2.5.
- The Carbon Monoxide (CO) from charcoal was only a bit higher than the Three Stone Fire (19.2g/MJ).
- LPG did so well! (Too bad that we are entering the end of the fossil fuel era).
- The forced draft pellet stove looked great, as well. (PM2.5: 30g/MJ, 2.2g/MJ CO)
- Black Carbon (EC) is much worse than CO2 for climate change. Many of the stoves, except the Rocket stove, successfully reduced Black Carbon.
- In this recent lab test, as in the previous MacCarthy study (2008), the Rocket stove emitted a lot of Black Carbon. www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0973082608604299
- R&D has shown that the Rocket stove requires successful forced draft mixing at high temperatures to decrease emissions of Black Carbon and potentially address climate.
When the emissions factors are summed and converted to global warming potential the forced draft stoves have the potential to generate large amounts of carbon offsets.
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