Facility ID: 1013887 · Petroleum and Natural Gas Systems

Steamboat Processing Facility

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Douglas, WY · CONVERSE COUNTY · NAICS 213112

103K
MT CO2e (2023)
4
Reporting Years
WY
State

Annual Emissions History

2020
2021
2022
2023
Year Total CO2e (MT)
2023 103,157
2022 85,054
2021 97,649
2020 76,667

Facility Insight: Steamboat Processing Facility

Steamboat Processing Facility (EPA GHGRP Facility ID 1013887) reported 103K metric tons of CO2-equivalent in 2023, operating in Douglas, WY within CONVERSE COUNTY. The site is classified under Petroleum and Natural Gas Systems with NAICS code 213112, placing it within the group of U.S. facilities that cross the 25,000 MT CO2e annual reporting threshold set by EPA under 40 CFR Part 98. Self-reported emissions are verified by EPA staff, and the reported CO2e total aggregates CO2, methane (CH4), and nitrous oxide (N2O) weighted by their 100-year global warming potentials.

The facility has 4 years of reported data on record, covering the 2020–2023 window. Over that period, annual CO2e emissions rose by 34.6%, with the peak observed year showing up to 103K MT CO2e. Because facility emissions can swing year-to-year based on production volume, fuel mix, outages, or control upgrades, a single year rarely tells the full story — the emissions history table above unpacks CO2, CH4, and N2O contributions separately so readers can see which gas is driving the trend.

For context, this reported total captures Scope 1 direct emissions from on-site combustion, industrial processes, and fugitive sources — it excludes Scope 2 purchased electricity and Scope 3 upstream or downstream emissions. Users comparing this facility to others in WY should cross-reference with the state-level rollup on our WY emissions page and the parent company profile where linked, since facility-level disclosures are most meaningful when placed against the operator's broader portfolio. All underlying data is EPA-published and freely available via the GHGRP envirofacts API.

Emissions Analysis

Steamboat Processing Facility is a moderate emitter at 103K MT CO2e, typical of mid-sized industrial operations.

Emissions have increased 34.6% over the reporting period. This may result from expanded operations, increased production, or changes in fuel mix. EPA GHGRP covers facilities emitting 25,000+ MT CO2e annually.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much CO2 does Steamboat Processing Facility emit?

Steamboat Processing Facility reported 103K metric tons of CO2 equivalent (CO2e) in 2023, according to EPA Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program data.

Is Steamboat Processing Facility reducing emissions?

Over 4 reporting years (2020–2023), Steamboat Processing Facility's emissions have increased by 34.6%. This may reflect expanded operations or increased production.

What industry sector is Steamboat Processing Facility in?

Steamboat Processing Facility is classified under Petroleum and Natural Gas Systems (NAICS code 213112). Located in Douglas, WY.

What gases does Steamboat Processing Facility emit?

Steamboat Processing Facility reports emissions of CO2 (carbon dioxide), CH4 (methane), and N2O (nitrous oxide), converted to CO2-equivalent using EPA global warming potentials. The gas breakdown for each reporting year is shown in the emissions history table above.

How many years of data are available for Steamboat Processing Facility?

Steamboat Processing Facility has 4 years of EPA GHGRP data on record, spanning 2020 to 2023. The GHGRP has collected data since 2010 from facilities emitting 25,000+ MT CO2e annually.

Where does this emissions data come from?

All data comes from the EPA Greenhouse Gas Reporting Program (GHGRP), which requires facilities emitting 25,000+ metric tons of CO2e per year to report annually. Data is self-reported by facilities and verified by the EPA.

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Related Data Portals

Source: EPA GHGRP Facility ID 1013887. Data subject to facility self-reporting. Not compliance advice.

Related

Data sourced from official U.S. government datasets. See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by PlainCarbon Editorial