Estimating the life cycle greenhouse gas emissions of Australian ambulance services
journal contribution
posted on 2018-11-06, 00:00 authored by LH Brown, PG Buettner, DV Canyon, JM Crawford, Jennifer JuddJennifer JuddEmergency medical services, or 'ambulance services', are a vehicle-intense component of the health sector that could contribute to that sector's emissions reduction efforts. This analysis uses data from an inventory of ambulance service Scope 1 (arising from direct energy consumption) and Scope 2 (arising from purchased energy consumption) emissions, along with publicly available expenditure data and emissions multipliers derived from economy-wide input-output tables, to estimate the life cycle greenhouse gas emissions of Australian ambulance services. Total emissions are estimated at between 216,369 and 546,688 t CO2e annually, and represent between 1.8% and 4.4% of total Australian health sector emissions. Approximately 20% of ambulance service emissions arise from direct consumption of vehicle fuels (diesel and petrol) and aircraft fuels, with 22% arising from electricity consumption, and 58% arising from Scope 3 (e.g., supply chain; waste disposal) processes. Incorporating alternative fuels and higher efficiency vehicles into Australian ambulance services' vehicle fleets could reduce their direct greenhouse emissions, but broader efforts targeting reduced electricity consumption, greener electricity generation, and environmentally friendly purchasing practices will be required to substantially reduce their total carbon footprint. © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
History
Volume
37Start Page
135End Page
141Number of Pages
7ISSN
0959-6526Publisher
Elsevier BVPublisher DOI
Full Text URL
Peer Reviewed
- Yes
Open Access
- No
Acceptance Date
2012-06-24External Author Affiliations
James Cook University; University of Hawaii at Manoa; College of Public Health, Ohio State UniversityEra Eligible
- Yes
Journal
Journal of Cleaner ProductionUsage metrics
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