Download - Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

Transcript
Page 1: Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

Mike Weston, Operations Director

London Buses

Impacts Conference

29 March 2007

London Buses’ Emissions and CO2 Reduction

Strategy

Page 2: Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

Presentation overview

• Overview of the bus fleet and its environmental impact

• Environmental achievements to date

• Fuels and technologies trialled

• Future environmental programmes

Page 3: Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

London Bus Network

• 7952 vehicles in fleet, peak vehicle rate of 6882

• Single decks 33%, double decks 62%, articulated 5%

• 500 vehicles replaced each year

• Average age 4.3 years

• 40% aggregate growth in number of trips since 1999/00

• 454 million operated km and 1.8 billion passenger trips in 2005/6

• Forecast network growth of 16% between 2006/07 and 2014/15

Page 4: Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

Demand & service level: 2006/07 Business Plan

90%

100%

110%

120%

130%

140%

150%

160%

170%

19

95

/96

19

96

/97

19

97

/98

19

98

/99

19

99

/00

20

00

/01

20

01

/02

20

02

/03

20

03

/04

20

04

/05

20

05

/06

20

06

/07

20

07

/08

20

08

/09

20

09

/10

1999/00=100

passenger journeys

operated bus-km

The Business Plan projects a levelling-off of demand growth in the period to 2009/10.

Page 5: Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

Environmental priorities

• Climate Change– Carbon dioxide (CO2) and other greenhouse gases such as

nitrous oxide

• Air Quality– Fine particles (PM10) – Oxides of Nitrogen (NOx) and Nitrogen dioxide (NO2)

• Noise and vibration– Idling buses– Engine/fan noise

Page 6: Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

Emissions by vehicle type in London

Contribution to emissions in London by vehicle type - 2005

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

Motorcycles Cars Taxis Buses &coaches

LGV Rigid HGV Artic HGV

% c

on

trib

uti

on

CO2

PM10

NOx

N2O

Source: London Atmospheric Emissions Inventory 2005 forecast emissions

Page 7: Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

CO2 impact of the bus fleet

• Buses are largest contributor to TfL’s CO2 footprint at 40%

• Network consumes 260 million litres of diesel per year

• 682,000 tonnes of CO2 emissions produced per annum

Page 8: Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

Environmental achievements

• Environmental improvements largely driven by the Mayor’s Air Quality Strategy

• Developed a London bus specific emission tests protocol to evaluate new fuels and technologies before they enter the fleet

• All 8000 buses met minimum of Euro 2 emission standards in December 2005

• All buses were fitted with a particulate filter by December 2005 – fleet emissions reduced by approx 90% compared with 2000 for PM10, hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide

• Developed an acceleration based drive-by noise test – all buses coming into service must meet max limit specified

Page 9: Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

Emissions test protocol

0.00

10.00

20.00

30.00

40.00

50.00

60.00

0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800 2000 2200

Spee

d (k

m/h

)

Test Time (secs)

Page 10: Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

Environmental achievements

• Environmental improvements largely driven by the Mayor’s Air Quality Strategy

• Developed a London bus specific emission tests protocol to evaluate new fuels and technologies before they enter the fleet

• All 8000 buses met minimum of Euro 2 emission standards in December 2005

• All buses were fitted with a particulate filter by December 2005 – fleet emissions reduced by approx 90% compared with 2000 for PM10, hydrocarbons and carbon monoxide

• Developed an acceleration based drive-by noise test – all buses coming into service must meet max limit specified

Page 11: Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

Fleet emission trends• PM reduction due to:

better engine technologyparticulate trap programmetrap reduces PM by over 90% including ultrafines

• Similar trend in HC and CO

• NOx emissions have increased since 2001

increased fleet size worse g/km emissions under London conditions with Euro III engines

• Introduction of Euro IV buses will reverse this trend

• CO2 emissions have risen over the last 6 years

increased fleet size/km travelled no improvement in fuel consumption with new Euro III technology

Page 12: Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

Fuels/technologies trialled to date

• Water Diesel Emulsion (WDE) – Initial trials were promising but technical problems occurred on Euro III vehicles. Tax arrangements results in WDE costing 3 pence per litre more than diesel

• Gas to Liquids – short trial with Shell using articulated Citraro. Trial successful and Shell now developing production capability

• LPG – emissions tests showed 30% reduction in NOx but virtually no change in CO2

• NOx Abatement – 24 vehicles currently in retrofit trial. NOx emissions reduced by up to 65% with no increase in greenhouse gas emissions

• Diesel-electric hybrids

• Hydrogen-powered Fuel Cell Technology

Page 13: Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

Hybrid trials

• Six single deck diesel-electric hybrids from Wrightbus introduced in March 2006

• Vehicles are ‘series’ hybrid, powered by 336 volt battery pack and 1.9 litre diesel Euro IV engine

• 38% reduction in CO2

• 89% reduction in NOx

• 2 dBA noise reduction

• Smooth acceleration

• First double deck hybrid entered service March 2007

Page 14: Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

Fuel cell bus trial

• Just completed three year trial of running three DaimlerChrylser fuel cell buses in service as part of CUTE/Hyfleet:CUTE project part funded by EC

• Very good operational availability achieved for the buses – 90% on average

• Main limitation is the high fuel consumption and range of the vehicles

• Next generation vehicle will address this through hydridisation

Page 15: Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

Hydrogen filling station

• BP constructed hydrogen filling station as part of trial

• Based on storage of liquid hydrogen underground – dispensed as gaseous

• Reliability good but refuelling times too long

• Overall WTW CO2 emissions high due to use of liquid hydrogen trucked in from France – other cities in project trialled hydrogen produced from renewables

Page 16: Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

Future environmental programmes

• Strategy will focus on reducing carbon dioxide

• Programmes will focus on delivering reductions in line with Mayor’s Climate Change Action Plan

• Extensive research and development programme to test new fuels and technologies that may offer environmental benefits

• Short to medium term focus will be to introduce diesel electric-hybrid technology

• Long term strategy is to move towards hydrogen and fuel cell technology

Page 17: Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

Research and development

• Acceleration control is being trialled on new buses coming into the fleet – limits drivers ability to accelerate too hard thereby reducing fuel consumption

• Large proportion of bus operators now use fuel with up to 5% biodiesel. Testing of higher blends to be undertaken but issue of engine warranties to resolve

• Emissions testing of ethanol buses undertaken and a double deck bus soon to enter service for short trial

• BTL fuel has potential to offer significant CO2 benefits with no engine modifications but supply not yet available. Possibility of depot trial with GTL fuel in the interim

Page 18: Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

Hybrids – Introduction plan

• Intention is to introduce 50 - 60 hybrids by end 2008 from various manufacturers

• Aim to evaluate technology, reliability, performance, fuel economy, emissions profiles

• Establish range of supply for future roll out

Page 19: Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

Hybrids – Introduction plan

• A number of manufacturers currently in process of developing demonstration vehicles to achieve the 50 – 60 buses by December 2008

• Roll - out beyond initial phase– 100 hybrids introduced during financial year 2009/2010– 200 hybrids introduced during financial year 2010/2011– 500 hybrids introduced during financial year 2011/2012

• All new buses entering service from April 2012 to be hybrid

Page 20: Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

Hydrogen transport programme - buses• London Buses is now taking steps towards a hydrogen bus programme to build

on the success of the CUTE project

• The bus programme forms part of the London Hydrogen Transport Programme which aims to deliver 70 hydrogen vehicles into London by 2010

• A fleet of 10 hydrogen buses will be operated on one London route, starting in 2008/9. Technology will be either hydrogen ICE or fuel cell

• A dedicated hydrogen refuelling facility will be built at the bus depot – main objective will be reliability, but consideration will be given to reducing CO2 emissions where possible

• Aim to achieve operation as close as possible to diesel buses – 18 hour days (370km range specified)– 364 days per year– five year contract– fast refuelling of buses in quick succession

Page 21: Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

Hydrogen transport programme – cars and vans

• 60 vehicles to be comprised of motorcycles, small cars, larger saloon cars and vans

• Phase 1 will involve delivery of 20 hydrogen vehicles and construction of two hydrogen refuelling facilities by 2008

• Vehicles operated by GLA family

• Remaining 40 vehicles in Phase 2 may be combination of hydrogen and other low carbon technologies

• Operation may extend to London local authorities

Page 22: Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

Hydrogen Bus Alliance

• London Buses has formed a Hydrogen Bus Alliance with other cities interested in procuring hydrogen buses

• Aim of Alliance is to:– Share knowledge and information especially with regards

procurement process– Give clear signal to the market that there is demand for hydrogen

buses– Work with hydrogen bus industry to develop a pathway towards

commercialisation– Achieve economies of scale where possible through co-

ordinating procurement programmes

• Currently seven cities/regions have signed MoU but others have expressed interest in joining

• New members welcome who are actively seeking to procure hydrogen buses in near future

Page 23: Mike Weston, Operations Director London Buses Impacts Conference 29 March 2007

www.tfl.gov.uk