Hello,
I am struggling with understanding if I should be using Annual Marginal Emission Factors (MEF) or Annual Average Emission Factors (AEF) for evaluating different building design decisions.
Everything I know is from this document. So as I understand it ... an individual building or retrofit is going to change the marginal emissions, which are driven by fossil fuels because they can be more easily turned off and on. Therefore MEFs are often higher than AEF. In some cases where the grid has consistent renewable or nuclear sources then MEF is much greater than AEF. For Ontario for instance, the AEF is 31 gCO2eq/kWh and the MEF is 123 gCO2eq/kWh. This could even be refined by using hourly, seasonal, peak, and off-peak MEFs, but lets build up to that!
Are others using MEFs for whold building emission estimates? Is anyone aware of MEF values for the US?
Thanks in advance!