10.3 Accidental Structural Fires

Category 750

10.3.1 Introduction

Category 750 accounts for criteria pollutants (particulate matter, organic, NOx, SOx, and CO) emissions from accidental structural fires. It’s an area source category that includes residential and commercial buildings fires as well as mobile and trailer home fires. Starting from the current base year inventory, the category was treated as “CARB Source Categories” and the process was described below.

10.3.2 Methodology

For certain categories in the base year inventory, emissions data are derived by inventory staff of the state’s chief air quality regulatory agency, the California Air Resources Board (CARB). This significant emissions dataset, sorted by county, is published every few years and is a product of the State Implementation Plan (SIP) emissions document formally known as the California Emissions Projection Analysis Model (CEPAM) inventory. For related sets of categories, such as airport ground support equipment (GSE), ships, structures coatings, where independent data collection and derivation of emissions are both cost- and time-prohibitive and likely a redundant effort, BAAQMD staff export the emissions data directly from CEPAM into the District’s Base Year inventory package. This calculation approach and collection of categories are internally termed as “CARB Source Categories”.

The CEPAM provides historical emissions as well as forecasts emissions for major emission source classifications including –

  1. on-road mobile sources [from Emissions Factor (EMFAC) model],
  2. off-road mobile sources (OFFROAD model), and,
  3. stationary and area sources - For these major source classifications, CEPAM combines facility level /area source emissions data reported to the California Emissions Inventory Development and Reporting System (CEIDARS) for multiple years by various regional air quality agencies (including the BAAQMD).

The current base year inventory uses the 2016 CEPAMv1.05 to estimate emissions from “CARB Source Categories”. This version of the CEPAM derives emissions from a 2012 base year inventory and contains backcasts and forecasts from year-2000 to year-2035. All applicable regulatory and technological controls are assumed to be built into the CEPAM dataset during CARB staff’s inventory computation work. After the emissions data are exported, the inventory for CARB Source categories is taken through a quality assurance (QA) process.

In the QA process, BAAQMD staff perform a systematic crosswalk between CEPAM’s source category classification (Emission Inventory Code - EICs) and the District’s source category classification (category identification number - cat_ids). Based on the scope of emissions covered, individual EIC or a group of EICs are mapped to a single cat_id. This process also addresses issues when cat_ids have no matching EICs or there are discontinued EICs that need to be investigated. Following this, emissions data are backcasted to year-1990, as well as forecasted to year-2040 using certain mathematical methods, as described in the Trends section. Finally, the emissions trends spanning from year 1990-2040 for each category and pollutant are evaluated, and CARB staff are consulted for explanation of any observed anomalies in trends.

For more details on how CARB estimated emissions for accidental structural fires, please refer to CARB’s CEPAM Inventory documentation. 442

10.3.3 Changes in Methodology

Comparing to previous base year inventory, the category was processed as a “CARB Source Categories” under the current base year inventory, where county and year specific emissions were ported over from CARB CEPAM inventory directly instead of processed as a area source where emissions were estimated following CARB methodology by the District staff.

10.3.4 Emissions

The accidental structure fires is a small source category for all pollutants. A summary of emissions by category, county, and year are available via the associated data dashboard for this inventory publication.

10.3.6 Uncertainties

There are unknown magnitude of uncertainties for the category. The methodology was developed back in 1999. Both the methodology itself and underlying data have not been evaluated or updated ever since. The District recommends to collect historical statistics of accidental structure fires in Bay Area from Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (CAL FIRE) to estimate historical emissions. The District also recommends to acquire historical housing unit statistics from Metropolitan Transportation Commission (MTC) so the correlation between the two could be assessed to help determine if it’s still reasonable to apply the housing unit-based growth profile.

10.3.7 Contact

Author: Yuan Du

Reviewer: Abhinav Guha, Tan Dinh

Last Update: November 06, 2023

10.3.8 References & Footnotes


  1. CARB. Criteria Pollutant Emission Inventory Information (CEPAM) . [accessed 2023 Mar 13]. https://ww2.arb.ca.gov/criteria-pollutant-emission-inventory-data↩︎

  2. CARB. November 2003. CEPAM Inventory Documentation Summary Section 7.14 Structural and Automobile Fires. https://ww3.arb.ca.gov/ei/areasrc/onehtm/one7-14.htm↩︎