Emissions Inventory

Overview

The USEPA requires States to inventory and submit emissions from air pollution sources. These sources include Point Sources (industrial stationary sources), Nonpoint Sources (small facilities, lawn mowers, wood stoves, etc.), and Mobile Sources (cars, trucks, boats, etc.). Only the Point Source emissions are required to be reported to the USEPA every year. Nonpoint and Mobile sources are reported every three years. The most recent comprehensive three-year inventory was for the 2020 calendar year.

Inventory data is used to verify whether air programs previously enacted are being effective and to aid in designing air programs needed to ensure air quality is improved or maintained. Additionally, for new rule development, the USEPA uses these emissions estimates to model the risk to nearby communities; especially for toxic air pollutants.

Area/Nonpoint Sources

Nonpoint sources, also known as area sources, include emissions estimates for sources which individually are too small in magnitude to report as point sources.  These emissions sources are included in emissions inventories as a county total or tribal total (for participating tribes).

Examples include residential heating, commercial combustion, asphalt paving, wildfires, and commercial and consumer solvent use.

Mobile Sources

Mobile sources, which includes onroad and nonroad sources, are emissions from vehicles that use gasoline, diesel, and other fuels. Onroad sources include vehicle emissions operating on roads, highway ramps, and during idling. Nonroad sources include off-road construction equipment, lawn and garden equipment, aircraft ground support equipment, locomotives, and commercial marine vessels.

Oil and Gas Sources

While the major emissions sources associated with oil and gas collection, processing, and distribution have traditionally been considered point sources (e.g. gas processing plants, pipeline compressor stations, and refineries), the activities occurring “upstream” of these types of facilities are considered nonpoint sources. This includes emissions from upstream exploration activities, the drilling of oil and gas wells, and the equipment used at the wellsite to extract the product from the well and deliver it to a central collection point or processing facility. The types of unit processes found at upstream sites include separators, dehydrators, storage tanks, and compressor engines.

SLEIS Database

West Virginia uses the State & Local Emissions Inventory System (SLEIS) database software to collect the Title V point source emissions.

  • SLEIS Registration Forms

    To use SLEIS, an account must be established. If you are not registered, please download, save, and complete the registration form from the SLEIS application and email the completed form to dep.aei@wv.gov.


Point Source Inventory Submission

Deadlines

Updated November 7, 2023

Major Title V facilities (not Title V deferred facilities) are required to submit the 2023 calendar year inventory by March 1, 2024. Data request letters will be mailed to each facility on or before January 3, 2024.

Deferred Title V Facilities are required to submit the 2023 calendar year inventory (facility summary only) by March 1, 2024. Data request letters will be mailed to each facility on or before January 3, 2024.

Required Documents

  • Declaration of Data Confidentiality

    Date: October 30, 2013
    Use to describe Confidential Business Information (CBI) in the Emission Inventory submittal. Do not put confidential information in the SLEIS submittal. Confidential data is to be submitted separately. If not claiming data confidential, put an "X" in the box labeled "Check here". Copy the completed table and attach it to your SLEIS emission inventory submittal.

  • Title V Cross Reference Table

    Date: October 30, 2013
    Use to reconcile differences between Title V and SLEIS numbering schemes. If the numbering schemes match exactly, submit with an "X" in the box labeled "Check here". Copy the completed table and attach it to your SLEIS emission inventory submittal. You must submit this spreadsheet every year, even if one was submitted for a prior year.

  • Certification of Data Accuracy

    Date: November 17, 2017
    This document cannot be submitted as an attachment in SLEIS, as it requires a confirmation number that will not be available until AFTER the SLEIS inventory has been submitted.

Document Submission

The Declaration of Data Confidentiality and Title V Cross Reference table spreadsheets must be completed and sent as attachments via SLEIS or submitted via email. The Certification of Data Accuracy must be printed, completed, and submitted on paper as it requires a signature and confirmation number that is unavailable until after the SLEIS inventory has been submitted. You may scan and email the completed Certification of Data Accuracy or print and submit it through postal mail.

Email

dep.aei@wv.gov

Postal Mail

West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection
Division of Air Quality
601 57th Street SE
Charleston, WV 25304


Supporting Information

The following documents contain useful information for emission inventory preparation and reporting.

Additional Resources


Contact Us

Matt Kemper, Environmental Resources Analyst
West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection
Division of Air Quality: Mobile Sources, Oil & Gas
601 57th Street SE
Charleston, WV 25304
Phone: (304) 926-0499 x41270
Email: Matt.A.Kemper@wv.gov

Megan Grose, Environmental Resources Analyst
West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection
Division of Air Quality: Invoicing, Fees, Non-Point Sources
601 57th Street SE
Charleston, WV 25304
Phone: (304) 926-0499 x43810
Email: Megan.E.Grose@wv.gov

Dave Porter, Engineer
West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection
Division of Air Quality: General Questions, Point Sources, SLEIS & Tech Support, Emissions Inventory
601 57th Street SE
Charleston, WV 25304
Phone: (304) 926-0499 x41291
Email: David.J.Porter@wv.gov