EN 19694-3:2016
Current
The latest, up-to-date edition.
Stationary source emissions - Determination of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in energy-intensive industries - Part 3: Cement industry
20-07-2016
European foreword
Introduction
1 Scope
2 Normative references
3 Terms and definitions
4 Symbols and abbreviated terms
5 Determination of GHGs based on the mass
balance method
6 System boundaries
7 Direct GHG emissions and their determination
8 Energy indirect and other indirect GHG emissions
and their determination
9 Baselines, acquisitions and disinvestments
10 Reporting
11 Uncertainty of GHG inventories
12 Considerations for applying this standard (verification
procedure)
Annex A (informative) - Findings from the field tests
(analytical interferences)
Annex B (informative) - Emission factors
Annex C (informative) - Uncertainty of activity data
Annex D (informative) - Overview on terms in a cement
plant
Bibliography
This European Standard specifies a harmonized methodology for calculating GHG emissions from the cement industry, with a view to reporting these emissions for various purposes and by different basis, such as, plant basis, company basis (by country or by region) or even international group basis. It addresses all the following direct and indirect sources of GHG included [1]:-Direct GHG emissions (scope 1) from sources that are owned or controlled by the organization, such as emissions result from the following sources:-process: calcinations of carbonates and combustion of organic carbon contained in raw materials;-combustion of kiln fuels (fossil kiln fuels, alternative fossil fuels, mixed fuels with biogenic carbon content, biomass and bioliquids) related to clinker production and/or drying of raw materials and fuels;-combustion of non-kiln fuels (fossil fuels, alternative fossil fuels, mixed fuels with biogenic carbon content, biomass and bioliquids) related to equipment and on-site vehicles, room heating/cooling, drying of MIC (e.g. slag or pozzolana);-combustion of fuels for on-site power generation;-combustion of carbon contained in wastewater.-Energy indirect GHG emissions (scope 2) from the generation of purchased electricity consumed in the organization’s owned or controlled equipment;-Other indirect GHG emissions (scope 3) from bought clinker. Excluded from this standard are all other scope 3 emissions from the cement industry.
Committee |
CEN/TC 264
|
DocumentType |
Standard
|
PublisherName |
Comite Europeen de Normalisation
|
Status |
Current
|
Standards | Relationship |
NS EN 19694-3 : 2016 | Identical |
I.S. EN 19694-3:2016 | Identical |
NF EN 19694-3 : 2016 | Identical |
NEN EN 19694-3 : 2016 | Identical |
BS EN 19694-3:2016 | Identical |
PN EN 19694-3 : 2016 | Identical |
UNI EN 19694-3 : 2016 | Identical |
SN EN 19694-3:2016 | Identical |
DIN EN 19694-3:2016-10 | Identical |
UNE-EN 19694-3:2018 | Identical |
EN 15440 : 2011 COR 2011 | SOLID RECOVERED FUELS - METHODS FOR THE DETERMINATION OF BIOMASS CONTENT |
EN 196-2:2013 | Method of testing cement - Part 2: Chemical analysis of cement |
EN 197-1:2011 | Cement - Part 1: Composition, specifications and conformity criteria for common cements |
EN 15058:2017 | Stationary source emissions - Determination of the mass concentration of carbon monoxide - Standard reference method: non-dispersive infrared spectrometry |
ISO 12039:2001 | Stationary source emissions Determination of the mass concentration of carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide and oxygen in flue gas Performance characteristics of automated measuring systems |
ISO 20988:2007 | Air quality Guidelines for estimating measurement uncertainty |
EN 206:2013+A1:2016 | Concrete - Specification, performance, production and conformity |
ISO/IEC Guide 98-3:2008 | Uncertainty of measurement — Part 3: Guide to the expression of uncertainty in measurement (GUM:1995) |
Access your standards online with a subscription
Features
-
Simple online access to standards, technical information and regulations.
-
Critical updates of standards and customisable alerts and notifications.
-
Multi-user online standards collection: secure, flexible and cost effective.