The Greenhouse
Gases, Regulated Emissions, and
Energy Use in Transportation (GREET) Model
Are you interested in calculating your travel carbon footprint?
GREET Downloads
- GREET 1.8d.1 (Fuel-Cycle Model) - August 26, 2010 (download)
This version includes the following revisions to the corn ethanol pathway
» Revised corn farming energy and fertilizer use
» Revised the ratio of DDGS and WDGS from dry mill plants to animal farms in the U.S.
- GREET 1.8d.0 (Fuel-Cycle Model) - July 30, 2010
What's New in GREET1.8d.0?
» Updated overall petroleum refinery efficiency
» Updated corn and cellulosic ethanol pathways
» Updated soybean-based biodiesel pathway
» Updated gas-to-liquids (GTL), coal-to-liquids (CTL), biomass-to-liquids (BTL), and coal and biomass to liquids (C/BTL) pathways
» New pathways for landfill gas (LFG) to produce compressed natural gas (CNG) and liquefied natural gas (LNG)
» Updated fuel economies of baseline and alternative vehicle technologies
» Updated projections of United States (US), California (CA), and northeastern (NE) US electricity generation mixes based on EIA's Annual Energy Outlook 2010
» New options to account for energy uses and emissions associated with the construction of infrastructure for various electric power plants
» Updated pathways for plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs) and battery-powered electric vehicles
» For more details on these and other updates, please download and read the following document:
Summary of Expansions and Revisions of the GREET 1.8d Version (39 KB pdf)
- GREET 2.7 (Vehicle-Cycle Model) - August 30, 2007 (download)
How
Does GREET Work?
To fully evaluate energy and emission impacts of advanced vehicle technologies and new transportation fuels, the fuel cycle from wells to wheels and the vehicle cycle through material recovery and vehicle disposal need to be considered. Sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE), Argonne has developed a full life-cycle model called GREET (Greenhouse gases, Regulated Emissions, and Energy use in Transportation). It allows researchers and analysts to evaluate various vehicle and fuel combinations on a full fuel-cycle/vehicle-cycle basis.

GREET was developed as a multidimensional spreadsheet model in Microsoft Excel. This public domain model is available free of charge for anyone to use. The first version of GREET was released in 1996. Since then, Argonne has continued to update and expand the model. The most recent GREET versions are GREET 1.8c.0 version for fuel-cycle analysis and GREET 2.7 version for vehicle-cycle analysis.
For a given vehicle and fuel system, GREET separately calculates the following:
- Consumption of total energy (energy in non-renewable and renewable sources), fossil fuels (petroleum, natural gas, and coal together), petroleum, coal and natural gas.
- Emissions of CO2-equivalent greenhouse gases - primarily carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), and nitrous oxide (N2O).
- Emissions of six criteria pollutants: volatile organic compounds (VOCs), carbon monoxide (CO), nitrogen oxide (NOx), particulate matter with size smaller than 10 micron (PM10), particulate matter with size smaller than 2.5 micron (PM2.5),and sulfur oxides (SOx).
GREET includes more than 100 fuel production pathways and more than 70 vehicle/fuel systems. General fuel production pathways are shown in the chart below:

GREET covers the following vehicle technologies :
- Conventional spark-ignition engines
- Direct-injection, spark-ignition engines
- Direct injection, compression-ignition engines
- Grid-independent hybrid electric vehicles
- Grid-connected (or plug-in) hybrid electric vehicles
- Battery-powered electric vehicles
- Fuel-cell vehicles
To address technology improvements over time, GREET simulates fuel production pathways and vehicle systems over a period from 1990 to 2020, in five-year intervals.
Uses
of GREET
Argonne has used GREET to evaluate various engine and fuel systems for DOE, other government agencies, and industry (see publications list). In addition, other organizations have used GREET for their evaluation of advanced vehicle technologies and new transportation fuels. GREET users include government agencies, the auto industry, the energy industry, research institutions, universities, and public interest groups. GREET users are spread in North America, Europe, and Asia.
May 2009
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