Energies (Feb 2011)

The Health Impacts of Ethanol Blend Petrol

  • Rosemary Wood,
  • David Williams,
  • Stephen White,
  • Anne Tibbett,
  • Jennifer Powell,
  • Michael Patterson,
  • James McGregor,
  • Peter Nancarrow,
  • Imants Liepa,
  • Sunhee Lee,
  • Sarah Lawson,
  • Steven Lavrencic,
  • Melita Keywood,
  • David Jacyna,
  • Ian Galbally,
  • Stephen Haiser,
  • Brendan Halliburton,
  • Robert Hynes,
  • Owen Farrell,
  • Martin Cope,
  • Dennys Angove,
  • Merched Azzi,
  • Steve Brown,
  • Ian Campbell,
  • Bin Jalaludin,
  • Tom Beer,
  • John Carras,
  • David Worth,
  • Nick Coplin,
  • Peter K. Campbell,
  • Jason Ward

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/en4020352
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 2
pp. 352 – 367

Abstract

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A measurement program designed to evaluate health impacts or benefits of using ethanol blend petrol examined exhaust and evaporative emissions from 21 vehicles representative of the current Australian light duty petrol (gasoline) vehicle fleet using a composite urban emissions drive cycle. The fuels used were unleaded petrol (ULP), ULP blended with either 5% ethanol (E5) or 10% ethanol (E10). The resulting data were combined with inventory data for Sydney to determine the expected fleet emissions for different uptakes of ethanol blended fuel. Fleet ethanol compatibility was estimated to be 60% for 2006, and for the air quality modelling it was assumed that in 2011 over 95% of the fleet would be ethanol compatible. Secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation from ULP, E5 and E10 emissions was studied under controlled conditions by the use of a smog chamber. This was combined with meteorological data from Sydney for February 2004 and the emission data (both measured and inventory data) to model pollutant concentrations in Sydney’s airshed for 2006 and 2011. These concentrations were combined with the population distribution to evaluate population exposure to the pollutant. There is a health benefit to the Sydney population arising from a move from ULP to ethanol blends in spark-ignition vehicles. Potential health cost savings for Urban Australia (Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane and Perth) are estimated to be A$39 million (in 2007 dollars) for a 50% uptake (by ethanol compatible vehicles) of E10 in 2006 and $42 million per annum for a 100% take up of E10 in 2011. Over 97% of the estimated health savings are due to reduced emissions of PM2.5 and consequent reduced impacts on mortality and morbidity (e.g., asthma, cardiovascular disease). Despite more petrol-driven vehicles predicted for 2011, the quantified health impact differential between ULP and ethanol fuelled vehicles drops from 2006 to 2011. This is because modern petrol vehicles, with lower emissions than their older counterparts, will make up a higher proportion of the fleet in the future. Hence the beneficial effects of reductions in particulate matter become less significant as the fleet as a whole produces lower emissions.

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