LADCO Comments on 2016beta

  1. IL Oil and Gas: VOC increase in nonpoint O&G from 2011 to 2016 in SE IL; IL and LADCO to provide hours/year of different upstream equipment categories for the v1 Oil & Gas Tool

  2. ag NH3: IL trend different from the rest of the region (reduction from 14->16, where other states are increasing); why is WI showing the biggest drop in the region (most of the region is seeing a 25-30% decrease from 11->16, WI is having ~50% drop)

  3. CMV_C1C2: why the increases in 2016 relative to 2011?

  4. Onroad NOx: Why do OH and MI show a bigger reduction in onroad NOx from 2011 to 2016 relative to the other LADCO states

  5. Nonroad NOx: Check MI and WI nonroad reductions, seem to be larger than for the rest of the region

  6. Agricultural Equipment Monthly Temporal Profile: the monthly variability in the ag sector is not reflective of the ag operations in the LADCO region; LADCO to provide documentation of temporal profiles for this sector to EPA for the v1 NONROAD simulation

  7. Agricultural Equipment Fuel use: magnitude of the ag emissions needs to reflect the regional fuel use numbers; LADCO to provide documentation of 2004 fuel use estimates by county for the v1 NONROAD simulation

  8. CMV C1C2 Temporal Profile: 90% of the IL NOx from CMV C1C2 underway (SCC: 2280002200) is using a flat monthly profile, 10% of the IL NOx from CMV C1C2 is using the GLCMV3 monthly profile; how is this split determined?

  9. Nonpoint O&G Monthly Temporal Profiles: check monthly profile application for nonpoint O&G SCC 2310010300 in IL; appears to be county-specific? convert to flat?;

  10. Point O&G Monthly Temporal Profiles: check the profiles for IL (and other LADCO state) point O&G SCCs 20200202, 20100201, 31000203, 20200101, 10200602, 20200204, 20100202, etc.; these appear to be non-oil and gas sector profile (i.e., EGU or non-EGU point) and should probably be flat

  11. RWC Summer Emissions: Why does the LADCO region have such relatively high RWC emissions in the summer? These emissions should look more like the rest of the country