Honeywell has been providing emissions monitoring, data collection and reporting solutions since 1993. We have helped customers comply with US legislation including the New Source Performance Standards (40 CFR Part 60), National Emissions Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants (40 CFR Part 63), State Operating Permits – Title V (40 CFR Part 70), and Continuous Emissions Monitoring (40 CFR Part 75), plus a host of other regulatory statutes. In addition, Honeywell has provided solutions for regional and international greenhouse gas programs, including the US Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI), Western Climate Initiative (WCI), US California Global Warming Act (AB32), Australia’s National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting (NGER) Act, and the EU Emissions Trading Scheme (EU ETS).
In response to EPA’s Mandatory Reporting of Greenhouse Gases Rule, Honeywell has a complete set of solutions tailored for different facility needs and scope of the reporting program. These include:
Regardless of the scope of supply you need to comply with the regulations or your business strategies, solutions from Honeywell provide the following benefits:
Contact us to learn more.
The Solution
Honeywell has GHG data collection and reporting solutions powered by their Environmental Information System, Cirrus EISTM, and backed by their GHG Emissions Dashboard. These solutions will perform data acquisition, calculations, record keeping, analysis, notification, reporting, and quality assurance from multiple emissions sources. Since Cirrus EIS is also a comprehensive Title V permit data collection system, it provides an ideal solution for process industries to meet their comprehensive environmental requirements. Honeywell can also assist customers in developing the required monitoring plans, data collection approaches, and reporting options for GHG emissions.
In addition, the GHG dashboard represents the foundation that can be expanded into Honeywell’s Energy and Emissions Dashboard that enables users to track energy consumption and GHG emissions against model-based targets. This will enable process industries to track their progress against energy and emissions targets and quickly identify on a unit, and equipment basis where deviations from expected targets occur.