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rleven13 karma

Hi @mrym-jml! Great question. It's very complicated. One major reason that's been cited in the past is lack of resources. Developing emission factors are really time- and money- intensive -- especially if the EPA is doing its own testing to develop factors rather than using already existing data. Part of what the EPA is working on now is automating that process -- getting companies to submit their emissions data electronically, and developing a program that will automatically identify decent quality data and use that to propose factors, which would address lots of the problems with these numbers. But the EPA again said this would depend on having the resources to complete this complex task, and wouldn't give a timeline for when that automation process would be fully developed.

rleven7 karma

A lot of my co-workers at the Center kept seeing scientific studies and other reports noting the EPA's emissions estimates were unreliable for one type of pollution or another, especially for methane emissions. They kept noticing this term "emission factors." My editor asked me to look into it, and I found that these factors actually informed a lot of what we know about our air quality across pollution sources and kinds of emissions. I found a lot of government watchdogs had been concerned about this for a long time, and we knew it was a story.

As to determining if emission factors are used in facilities near you -- its difficult. There isn't a central database showing how these factors are being used -- every permit they're in, for example. But you can always reach out to local academics, your local environment agency or other sources to ask for more information on a facility near you.

rleven4 karma

Emission factors actually kept coming up naturally in the environment team's reporting here at the Center, especially when looking at methane emissions So my editor asked me to look into it. As we learned how many of these factors were flawed, how much of our environmental protections by all levels of gov't they impact and how long the EPA has known about it these issues, we knew it was an important story to investigate.

rleven3 karma

Alright -- that's a wrap! Sorry for the earlier technical difficulties, but thanks so much for patience and your questions. Have a wonderful rest of your day.