Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA...

43
Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators

Transcript of Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA...

Page 1: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA

Ispra, ItalyJanuary, 2006

Framework for a Comparison of EEA and

EPA Indicators

Page 2: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

• Propose a framework for a cooperative effort to conduct an in-depth comparison of EEA and EPA environmental indicators.

• Present examples of EPA indicators from the upcoming EPA Report on the Environment that illustrate the key comparison issues.

• Set the stage for discussing additional issues that involve electronic augmentation and updating of indicators going forward (next presentation).

Purposes

Page 3: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

EPA’s Report on the EPA’s Report on the Environment Environment

Recent events and future Recent events and future

directionsdirections

Page 4: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Recent events & future directionsRecent events & future directionsSince we met in May 2005• July 2005: Peer review of proposed indicators• Oct. 2005: Second peer review of indicators

newly proposed or significantly revised

Looking Ahead• January 2006: Posting of “final” indicators for ROE 2007 on the internet• September 2006: Scientific peer review of full ROE Technical Document• Spring 2007: Final Release of Technical Document

Page 5: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Background

• At Washington, DC meeting in May, 2005, we decided to pursue a comparison of EEA and EPA indicators (including scaling).

• EPA Post-Doc, Ellen Natesan, developed a white-paper comparing EEA core indicators with indicators from EPA’s 2003 Draft Report on the Environment.

• Since then, many indicators have been updated and regionalized, and new indicators have been added for the 2007 ROE.

Page 6: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Propositions

• Indicators may fundamentally differ because of purpose, criteria, etc.

• Indicators may fundamentally differ because of monitoring design, methods, averaging period, scale, and reference points

• To the extent that the indicators are transparent and reproducible, and the date well-documented and accessible, if two indicators are not fundamentally different, an opportunity exists to calibrate one indicator against the other.

Page 7: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Overview of Proposed Criteria for Comparisons

• Purpose of indicators

• Indicator definition, criteria and “ground rules”

• Monitoring design and data comparability

• Quality assurance

• Scaling

• Data management and accessibility

Page 8: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Purpose of Indicators

• ROE indicators answer questions about the state of the environment over time (e.g., are ozone levels decreasing over time?)

• Accountability indicators track the effectiveness of particular programs (e.g., are controls on mobile sources reducing ozone?) – Must be responsive to early actions– Must differentiate among causes– May involve cost-effectiveness

Page 9: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Purpose of Indicators

• Examples– What are the trends in outdoor air quality and

their effects on human health and the environment?

• Sulfur Dioxide Emissions• Ozone Injury to Forest Plants

– What are the trends in extent and condition of fresh surface waters and their effects on human health and the environment?

• Nitrogen and Phosphorus in Streams in Agricultural Watersheds

• Benthic Invertebrates in Wadeable Streams

Page 10: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Indicator Definition and Criteria

• ROE Indicator – a numerical value derived from actual measurements of a pressure, ambient condition, exposure, or human health or ecological condition over a specified geographic domain, whose trends over time represent or draw attention to underlying trends in the condition of the environment.

Page 11: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Indicator Types

Page 12: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

What is currently NOT included

• Administrative indicators (government actions and responses to them)

• Resource use

• Economic and “sustainability” indicators

Page 13: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

ROE Indicator Criteria

• The indicator is useful. It answers (or makes an important contribution to answering) a question in the ROE.

• The indicator is objective. It is developed and presented in an accurate, clear, complete, and unbiased manner.

• The indicator is transparent and reproducible. The specific data used and the specific assumptions, analytic methods, and statistical procedures employed are clearly stated

Page 14: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

ROE Indicator Criteria (cont.)

• The underlying data are characterized by sound collection methodologies, data management systems to protect its integrity, and quality assurance procedures.

• Data are available to describe changes or trends and the latest available data are timely.

• The data are comparable across time and space, and representative of the target population. Trends depicted in the indicator accurately represent the underlying trends in the target population.

Page 15: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

ROE Indicator Modeling “Ground Rule”

• A model may be used to calculate and indicator value based on a physical measurement that is not itself the indicator, as long as the physical value and the indicator are at the same hierarchical level.

– Permissable: NOX emissions based on fuel consumption and an emissions factor

– Not permissable: acid deposition based on SO2 emissions

Page 16: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Monitoring design & data comparability

• What is being measured? Are the methods equivalent? Is guidance available and being followed?

• Where are the monitoring sites located? How were the locations chosen (e.g., purposive vs probability designs)

• When are samples collected? What is the averaging period?

• What are the reference points?

Page 17: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Monitoring design & data comparability

• What is being measured? Are the methods equivalent? Is guidance available and being followed?

Page 18: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Examples

• SO2 and VOC Emissions

• Fuel Combustion: Power Generators - emissions from coal, gas, and oil-fired power plants required to use continuous emissions monitors (SO2 only)

• Fuel Combustion: Other Sources -industrial, commercial, institutional and residential heaters and boilers not required to use CEMs – emissions factors and DOE Fuel use data

• Other Industrial Processes – e.g., chemical production and petroleum refining – emissions factors, production data

Page 19: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

SO2 and VOC Emissions

• On-road Vehicles – e.g. cars, trucks, buses, and motorcycles – FHWA mileage estimates and EPA’s MOBILE6 model

• Non-road Vehicles and Engines – e.g., farm and construction equipment, lawnmowers, chainsaws, boats/ships, aircraft – EPA’s NONROAD model

Page 20: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

National Emissions Inventory

• Conducted every three years

• EPA develops some data (electricity generators)

• States develop other data with guidance from EPA

• EPA performs consistency checks

• Methods evolve - only 1990 inventory fully reconciled to latest inventory year

Page 21: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.
Page 22: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.
Page 23: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Monitoring design & data comparability

• Where are the monitoring sites located? How were the locations chosen (e.g., purposive vs probability designs)

• When are samples collected? What is the averaging period?

• What is the reference point?

Page 24: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Examples

• Nitrogen and Phosphorus in streams

– Nitrate in streams in agricultural watersheds

– Nutrient Concentrations in wadeable streams

Page 25: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Three possibilities

• Section 305(b) of Clean Water Act - States

• National Water Quality Assessment (NAWQA) – U.S. Geological Survey

• Wadeable Streams Assessment (SWA) – EPA and States

Page 26: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Section 305(b) of Clean Water Act

• States determine (attainable) designated uses for each water body

• Monitor against water quality standards appropriate for the designated use

• Report to EPA every two years on percentage of water bodies that meet standards (possible indicator)

Page 27: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Section 305(b) of Clean Water Act

• Only a small fraction of water bodies assessed

• Biases in designation of use and water bodies monitored

• Standards and methods vary from state to state

• Rejected as indicator in FY03 Draft ROE for failure to meet indicator criteria

Page 28: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Nutrients in Streams

• NAWQA– Purposive design (50

watersheds)

– Sampled at many points in the watershed

– Sampled 12-13 times/year

– No reference levels

• WSA – Probability design

(1392 reaches)

– Sampled at one point on the reach

– Sampled once every 4 years (summer)

– Reference levels based on statistics from regional reference sites

Page 29: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.
Page 30: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.
Page 31: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Nitrate in streams in agricultural watersheds, NAWQA (1992-1998)

52.3%

29.9%

8.4%9.3%

0%

20%

40%

60%

80%

100%

1992-1998

less than 2 ppm

2 to 6 ppm

6 to 10 ppm

10 ppm or more

Pe

rce

nt o

f Str

eam

Site

s

EPA's drinking water standard is 10 ppm (Maximum Contaminant Level).

Page 32: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Nutrient Concentrations in Wadeable Streams

WSA (1999-2003)

51%

45%

17%

22%

32%

33%

0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%

TotalPhosphorus

Total Nitrogen

Percentage of stream miles

Low: Below 75th percentile of reference range

Moderate: Between 75th and 95th percentiles of reference range

High: Above 95th percentile of reference range

Source: U.S. EPA, Wadeable Streams Assessment

Page 33: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Nutrients in Streams

• NAWQA – Better characterization

of sampled streams and watersheds

But

– Expensive

– Can’t be extrapolated to unsampled streams

– No confidence bounds for national estimates

• WSA– Unbiased estimates of

all wadeable streams, with known confidence

– Comparatively inexpensive

But

– Poor characterization of individual reaches

– No data for extreme events or other seasons

Page 34: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Quality assurance

• Are controls in place to insure that the data are of adequate and know quality?

• Are the metadata available?

• Links to QA Plans and metadata for ROE indicators in Indicator QA forms (Heather Case’s presentation)

Page 35: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Scaling

• What is the most disaggregated level at which the indicator is meaningful?

• Is the reference level appropriate for the extent and grain size of the indicator? How important are episodes?

• How sensitive is the indicator to the effects of a few very large entities?

Page 36: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Scaling

• What is the most disaggregated level at which the indicator is meaningful?

– SO2 and VOC emissions

• ROE07 - 10 EPA Regions

• 3100 US counties (theoretically)

– N&P in streams

• ROE07 - national only

• NAWQA – 50 predominantly agricultural watersheds

• WSA – 10 EPA Regions (theoretically) or 9 ecoregions

Page 37: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Scaling

• What is the most disaggregated level at which the indicator is meaningful?

Page 38: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.
Page 39: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.
Page 40: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Scaling

• What is the most disaggregated level at which the indicator is meaningful?

Page 41: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Scaling

• Is the reference level appropriate for the extent and grain size of the indicator? How important are episodes?

– Mean levels of toxic chemicals in a stream may not mean much if storm events do the damage

• How sensitive is the indicator to the effects of a few very large entities?

– A very small percentage of emitters may be responsible for a large fraction of total emissions – to the extent that they are concentrated in a few states or regions, they may skew national statistics

Page 42: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Data management and accessibility

• The key to transparency and reproducibility

• All ROE indicators have

– Data underlying the figures available in excel spreadsheets online

– Links to parent databases

• Some ROE indicators have

– Links to datasets (or data in excel spreadsheets) that underlie the data supporting the figures.

Page 43: Heather Case and Jay Messer U.S. EPA Ispra, Italy January, 2006 Framework for a Comparison of EEA and EPA Indicators.

Conclusions

• Indicators may fundamentally differ because of purpose, criteria, etc.

• Indicators may fundamentally differ because of monitoring design, methods, averaging period, scale, and reference points

• To the extent that the indicators are transparent and reproducible, and the date well-documented and accessible, if two indicators are not fundamentally different, an opportunity exists to calibrate one indicator against the other.