Under a particular set of circumstances: when 1) using the new speciation-in-SMOKE option, and 2) also using the relatively new multiple subsector output option (e.g. gas/diesel) at the same time, and 3) when at least one of the subsectors is empty.
It looks like when there is an empty subsector, SMOKE mixes up the different species and puts the value for one species under another species in the subsector files. This only happens when we are doing speciation-in-SMOKE, so this hasn’t come up in our recent runs like 2016v2 platform where we are splitting gas and diesel but are not doing speciation in SMOKE.
Under a particular set of circumstances: when 1) using the new speciation-in-SMOKE option, and 2) also using the relatively new multiple subsector output option (e.g. gas/diesel) at the same time, and 3) when at least one of the subsectors is empty.
It looks like when there is an empty subsector, SMOKE mixes up the different species and puts the value for one species under another species in the subsector files. This only happens when we are doing speciation-in-SMOKE, so this hasn’t come up in our recent runs like 2016v2 platform where we are splitting gas and diesel but are not doing speciation in SMOKE.