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Phase IV Projection Emission Inventories

This document provides an overview of the Phase IV Projection Emission Inventories FEJF meeting, including the phases of fire EIs, activity scenarios for each fire type, and the basic steps to run the calculation tool prototype. It also discusses the post-processing, detailed results, rounding deviation statistics, and significant features of the 2018 projection calculation tool.

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Phase IV Projection Emission Inventories

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  1. Phase IV Projection Emission Inventories FEJF Meeting Day 2, 9:30a February 8, 2006 – Albuquerque, NM

  2. Phases of Fire EIs • Phase II (historical 2002) • Baseline (Phase III) (nominal 2000-2004) • Projections (Phase IV) (nominal 2018)Activity Scenarios for each fire type • Less • Likely • More Note: The PLANNING inventories (Phase III & IV) are unique EI’s…unique from each other AND unique from Phase II

  3. 2018 Projection Activity Scalars

  4. Anticipated 2018 Activity Levels(Acres)

  5. Air Quality Planning Fire EI Suites

  6. Basic Steps to Run theCalc Tool

  7. Calc Tool Prototype as Excel Workbook

  8. Load Seed Data (WRAP Baseline)

  9. 1- User enters scalars 2- Tool calculates number of new events/acres needed 3- Hit “Go” and events are “looked up” from randomized Source sheet into New Events sheet

  10. Post Processing • Apply ERTs after Calc Tool selection(Will be integrated into Calc Tool.) • ERT Seasonal Suites for lookup table being finished after yesterdays’ Strawman Session. • Combine output into single 250,000 record all-scenario database for graphing and QA. • Format into SMOKE and NIF files.

  11. Detailed Results andCalc Tool Methods

  12. WRAP Phase IV 2018 Fire Projection EI Prescribed Burning by State: Activity and Emissions

  13. WRAP Phase IV 2018 Fire Projection EI Prescribed Burning by State: Averted Emissions

  14. NFR data graphed here is not from final model-ready emission inventory

  15. Rounding Deviation from Scalars and Activity Targets • Multiplying a baseline level times its scalar arrived at an activity target in acres. • By design, the Calc Tool pulls fire-days (with their complete acres and emissions) up to this activity target. • For every jurisdiction in the calc tool, the event-based projection EI will therefore deviate from the activity targets. • Can be thought of as a “rounding error.”

  16. Rounding Deviation Statistics • Assessed deviation by-state or by-agency or by-burn type for all fire types and scenarios. • Did not attempt to hit each Rx state-agency-burn type combination. • Average deviation of 2.6% for all 124 scalars needed for 2018 projections suites. • 10 projections were over 10%. These had fewer than 100,000 acres as the projection target so could be affected by a large fire in seed data. • Two of the largest are being examined and improved at present.

  17. Significant Features of 2018 Projection Calc Tool

  18. Significant Features –Software Architecture • Software design strategy of “seed data” versus programming code to create new EI • Customize historic data to have appropriate seed events for desired projection EI. • Leave Calc Tool code to only choose events up to activity targets, not modify events per se. • Benefit: User can alter event data to suite EI planning rather than reworking code. • Pre-processing seed data • Random sort of events so new EI doesn’t have undesirable patterns in events. For instance an 0.5 scalar pulls events only from counties A – M because of original order. • Hand remove or flag ineligible events: Certain large Rx fires were causing big rounding errors in jurisdictions with small targets. Flag a realistic size limit for WFU events in WF pool.

  19. Significant Features – Rx Stem Cell Events • Creating fire events for 2018 where none existed in historic data (aka “stem cell events”) • Scalars and IFC activity targets resulted in 2018 Rx activity projected for state-agency-burn type combinations which did not exist in 2002/baseline seed data. • For only those instances, prototype prescribed burns were created outside the calc tool and augmented into seed data. • 50 acre broadcast burns and 25 acre pile burns dropped on every 12-km grid cell per agency land where needed. • Fuel loading (at centroid), lat/lon, and random date assigned to event (piles: April or November; broadcast: April or October). • Benefit: Reasonable size and date with site-specific fuel loading satisfies this unexpected gap filling. Compatible with cloning.

  20. Significant Features –Event Management • Cloning events • Rx events are re-used to create more activity. • WF events are re-used to achieve WFU targets. • “Data inbreeding” mitigated by adjusting date +/- 7 days and assuming event occurs elsewhere in same model grid cell. • Benefit: Create additional realistic model-ready activity for 2018 while not simply scattering events or scaling up emissions in existing events. • Handling multi-day events and smoldering records • Random sort of seed events does preserve fire-day order and smolder record pairing. • Benefit: Entire events are pulled into new EI.

  21. Next Steps • Complete ERT strawman for Southwest and Intermountain West regions. At present utilizing Northwest ERT suite for all states. • Circulate and implement strawman docs for Nat/Anth assignment of WFU, EPA-compatible SCC codes, and Ag projections. • Refine the Rx Fire Calc Tool as a prototype software for state and Tribe scale.

  22. Next Steps • Deliver formatted output files from Phase IV Calc Tools and group into modeling suites. • Deliver Draft documentation for Phase III/IV Task Team Review • Incorporate comments and deliver Phase III/IV Final documentation.

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