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Life cycle greenhouse gas emissions of multi-pathways natural gas vehicles in china considering methane leakage

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posted on 2025-08-01, 07:18 authored by Z Yuan, X Ou, T Peng, X Yan
Natural gas has been promoted rapidly recent years to substitute traditional vehicle fuels. However, methane leakages in the natural gas supply chains make it difficult to ascertain whether it can reduce greenhouse gas emissions when used as a transport fuel. This paper characterizes the natural gas supply chains and their segments involved, estimates the venting and fugitive leakages from natural gas supply chains, decides the distribution among segments and further integrates it with life cycle analysis on natural gas fueled vehicles. Domestic natural gas supply chain turns out to be the dominant methane emitter, accounting for 67% of total methane leakages from natural gas supply chains. Transportation segments contribute 42–86% of the total methane leakages in each supply chain, which is the greatest contribution among all the segments. Life cycle analysis on private passenger vehicles, transit buses and heavy-duty trucks show that compressed natural gas and liquefied natural gas bring approximately 11–17% and 9–15% greenhouse gas emission reduction compared to traditional fossil fuels, even considering methane leaks in the natural gas supply chains. Methane leakages from natural gas supply chains account for approximately 2% of the total life cycle greenhouse gas emissions of natural gas vehicles. The results ascertain the low-carbon attribute of natural gas, and greater efforts should be exerted to promote natural gas vehicles to help reduce greenhouse gas emissions from on-road transportation.

Funding

2016YFE0102200

71673162

71690244

71774095

International Science & Technology Cooperation Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

History

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Rights

© 2019. This version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Elsevier via the DOI in this record

Journal

Applied Energy

Publisher

Elsevier

Version

  • Accepted Manuscript

Language

en

FCD date

2019-09-09T10:39:50Z

FOA date

2020-07-09T23:00:00Z

Citation

Vol. 253, article 113472

Department

  • Engineering

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