University of Texas at San Antonio
OP-1: Emissions Inventory and Disclosure
Status | Score | Responsible Party |
---|---|---|
3.00 / 3.00 |
Anna
Morton Consultant consultant |
"---"
indicates that no data was submitted for this field
Part 1. Greenhouse gas emissions inventory
Yes
A copy of the most recent GHG emissions inventory:
A brief description of the methodology and/or tool used to complete the GHG emissions inventory:
The GHG emissions inventory follows the Greenhouse Gas Protocol. University activities and the associated emissions are translated into equivalent carbon emissions (CO2e) using the 2014 IPCC Fifth Assessment. Our Utility Manager and Energy Manager prepare GHG report for the State Comptroller's office in compliance with State Energy Conservation Office.
Has the GHG emissions inventory been validated internally by personnel who are independent of the GHG accounting and reporting process and/or verified by an independent, external third party?:
Yes
A brief description of the GHG inventory verification process:
We hired DBHMS a consultant and mechanical engineer to validate our Greenhouse gas data.
Documentation to support the GHG inventory verification process:
Scope 1 GHG emissions
Weight in MTCO2e | |
Stationary combustion | 14,183 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent |
Other sources (mobile combustion, process emissions, fugitive emissions) | 2,703 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent |
Total gross Scope 1 GHG emissions, performance year:
16,886
Metric tons of CO2 equivalent
Scope 2 GHG emissions
Weight in MTCO2e | |
Imported electricity | 45,085 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent |
Imported thermal energy | 0 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent |
Total gross Scope 2 GHG emissions, performance year:
45,085
Metric tons of CO2 equivalent
GHG emissions from biomass combustion
0
Metric tons of CO2 equivalent
Scope 3 GHG emissions
Yes or No | Weight in MTCO2e | |
Business travel | Yes | 2,126.59 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent |
Commuting | Yes | 49,078.81 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent |
Purchased goods and services | Yes | 34,065 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent |
Capital goods | --- | 28,923 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent |
Fuel- and energy-related activities not included in Scope 1 or Scope 2 | Yes | 12,831 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent |
Waste generated in operations | Yes | 1,285 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent |
Other sources | Yes | 1,366 Metric tons of CO2 equivalent |
Total Scope 3 GHG emissions, performance year:
129,675.40
Metric tons of CO2 equivalent
A brief description of how the institution accounted for its Scope 3 emissions:
Key assumptions (listed below) were made to account for Scope 3 emissions.
"University Population – 34,742 Students, 1,432 Faculty and 2,739 Staff
Business travel – air travel for conferences and other events. Assumes 1000 trips (one-way) an average of 1,500 miles.
Employee commuting - based on the average commute in San Antonio of 41 totals miles
50% of Students drive 5 days per week 30 weeks per year
95% of Faculty drive 5 days per week 35 weeks per year
95% of Staff drive 5 days per week 47 weeks per year
Student Travel – students traveling to and from campus at the start and end of the semester (4 times per year)
Air – 5% of the total student population travels 500 passenger-miles
Car – 20% of total population travels an average of 150 passenger-miles
Purchased goods and services – estimated from other university reporting
Capital goods - estimated from other university reporting
FERA – GHG Protocol Quantis tool was used to estimate this number based on Scope 1 and 2 data
Waste generated in operations - estimated from other university reporting"
"University Population – 34,742 Students, 1,432 Faculty and 2,739 Staff
Business travel – air travel for conferences and other events. Assumes 1000 trips (one-way) an average of 1,500 miles.
Employee commuting - based on the average commute in San Antonio of 41 totals miles
50% of Students drive 5 days per week 30 weeks per year
95% of Faculty drive 5 days per week 35 weeks per year
95% of Staff drive 5 days per week 47 weeks per year
Student Travel – students traveling to and from campus at the start and end of the semester (4 times per year)
Air – 5% of the total student population travels 500 passenger-miles
Car – 20% of total population travels an average of 150 passenger-miles
Purchased goods and services – estimated from other university reporting
Capital goods - estimated from other university reporting
FERA – GHG Protocol Quantis tool was used to estimate this number based on Scope 1 and 2 data
Waste generated in operations - estimated from other university reporting"
Part 2. Air pollutant emissions inventory
Yes
Annual weight of emissions for::
Weight of Emissions | |
Nitrogen oxides (NOx) | 6.82 Tons |
Sulfur oxides (SOx) | 0.11 Tons |
Carbon monoxide (CO) | 7.77 Tons |
Particulate matter (PM) | 30.69 Tons |
Ozone (O3) | --- |
Lead (Pb) | --- |
Hazardous air pollutants (HAPs) | --- |
Ozone-depleting compounds (ODCs) | --- |
Other standard categories of air emissions identified in permits and/or regulations | 2.78 Tons |
Do the air pollutant emissions figures provided include the following sources?:
Yes or No | |
Major stationary sources | Yes |
Area sources | Yes |
Mobile sources | Yes |
Commuting | Yes |
Off-site electricity production | Yes |
None
A brief description of the methodology(ies) the institution used to complete its air emissions inventory:
NOx 5.18 from Plant, 1.64 from commuting (estimated) business travel and employee and student commuting.
Methane 2.78 as a standard category estimated from business travel and employee and student commuting.
Methane 2.78 as a standard category estimated from business travel and employee and student commuting.
Optional Fields
---
Gross Scope 2 GHG emissions from imported thermal energy (location-based) :
0
Metric tons of CO2 equivalent
Website URL where information about the institution’s emissions inventories is available:
Additional documentation to support the submission:
Data source(s) and notes about the submission:
Our department is being updated. Our website is not complete. The updates are being moved around. Our links may not work. We will have permanent links once the website is final.
The information presented here is self-reported. While AASHE staff review portions of all STARS reports and institutions are welcome to seek additional forms of review, the data in STARS reports are not verified by AASHE. If you believe any of this information is erroneous or inconsistent with credit criteria, please review the process for inquiring about the information reported by an institution or simply email your inquiry to stars@aashe.org.