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Water Industry Conf London 010409

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Title: Water Industry Conf London 010409


1
Sustaining Future Ecosystem Services From
Understanding to Action Mini-Conference,
National Liberal Club, Whitehall Place, London,
26th June 2009 CARBON AND ENVIRONMENTAL
FOOTPRINTS ON THE PATHWAY TOWARDS
SUSTAINABILITY G.R. Cranstona, G.P. Hammonda,b
and C.I. Jonesa a Department of Mechanical
Engineering, b Institute of Sustainable Energy
the Environment (ISEE), University of Bath,
Bath. BA2 7AY. UK Speaker Prof. Geoff Hammond,
Director of ISEE Email ensgph_at_bath.ac.uk
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  • CONTENTS
  • ECOLOGICAL OR ENVIRONMENTAL FOOTPRINTS
  • SOME EXAMPLES OF THE USE OF ENVIRONMENTAL
    FOOTPRINTS -
  • One Planet Living
  • Urban and rural communities
  • CARBON FOOTPRINTS - EMBODIED ENERGY AND CARBON
    IN BUILDINGS, GOODS AND SERVICES
  • THE INVENTORY OF CARBON ENERGY ICE
  • THE ROLE AND LIMITS OF FOOTPRINTING

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ENVIRONMENTAL FOOTPRINTING THE BASICS
  • Definition Resources used and wastes produced
    by a defined population are converted to a common
    basis - the area of productive land and aquatic
    ecosystems sequestered (in hectares) from
    whatever source in global terms.
  • Land Types
  • Bioproductive Land
  • Crops
  • Pasture
  • Forest
  • Bioproductive Sea
  • Built Land
  • Energy Land
  • Biodiversity Land


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  • NORTH AND SOUTH GLOBAL AND NATIONAL
    ENVIRONMENTAL FOOTPRINTS
  • Environmental footprints represent a partial
    measure of the
  • extent to which the planet, its regions, or
    nations are moving
  • along a sustainable development pathway
  • Such footprints vary between countries at
    different stages of
  • economic development and varying geographic
    characteristics
  • The relative significance of population
    density, economic wealth,
  • and pollutant emission intensity has been
    determined (using
  • WWF and other international statistics)
  • This indicates which individual nations are
    currently frugal or
  • profligate in terms of their resource use
    and environmental
  • impacts
  • Source Hammond (2006) Cranston et al.
    (2007)

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  • TOWARDS A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE?
  • Sustainability is synonymous with scenarios
    that lead to steady-state conditions, or
    stabilisation, rather than collapse due
    to resource or other limits.
  • Whether or not humanity will experience such a
    collapse, or will be able to secure a
    sustainable future for people and wildlife,
    is too soon to tell.
  • The timescale for achieving sustainability is
    likely to be
  • 2050-2100, or longer Parkin (2000)

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SWINDON AND WILTSHIRE
  • Wiltshire mainly rural
  • County area of Wiltshire
  • Including the four districts
  • of Salisbury, Kennet,
  • North and West Wiltshire
  • Swindon mainly urban
  • The unitary authority of
  • the Borough of Swindon
  • Base Year 2003
  • Source Eaton, Hammond Laurie (2007)

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  • FOOTPRINT ANALYSIS OF SWINDON AND WILTSHIRE
  • Wiltshire mainly rural
  • 2,594,000 global hectares.
  • 5.94 global hectares per Wiltshire resident.
  • This amounts to an overshoot ration of 2.011
  • If the worlds population reflected this
    consumption,
  • then we would need the equivalent biocapacity
    of 2.3
  • extra Earths
  • Swindon mainly urban
  • 1,024,000 global hectares.
  • 5.65 global hectares per Swindon resident.
  • This amounts to an overshoot ration of 10.351
  • If the worlds population reflected this
    consumption,
  • then we would need the equivalent biocapacity
    of 2.0
  • extra Earths

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CARBON FOOTPRINTING THE BASICS
  • Definition The carbon footprint is a measure
    of the impact that
  • human activities have on the environment, and
    in particular on
  • climate change. It is the amount of
    greenhouse gases (GHG)
  • emitted through burning fossil fuels for
    electricity, heating, and
  • transportation in order to produce a good or
    service.
  • Carbon Footprints or Carbon Weights? The units
    are kgC per
  • functional unit, not ha.
  • Standards
  • ISO 14040 14044 Environmental Life Cycle
    Assessment
  • PAS 2050 Life Cycle GHG Emissions of Goods
    Services
  • Databases
  • Ecoinvent
  • Bath - Inventory of (Embodied) Carbon and Energy
    ICE


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  • THE CREATION OF THE ICE DATABASE
  • Created in support of a Carbon Trust and
    EPSRC-funded research project the Carbon
    Vision Buildings Programme.
  • Aim To produce an open-access, reliable database
    of embodied energy and carbon for typical
    building materials from cradle to gate.
  • It required values for the wide diversity of
    materials associated with buildings and
    construction.
  • this was considered this to be unavailable at
    the start of the project (in 2004).
  • Therefore we developed our own database

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  • INVENTORY OF CARBON ENERGY (ICE)
  • An embodied energy and carbon
  • database for building materials
  • ICE Excel and pdf files created to
  • summarise data
  • Draws from over 250 references
  • Embodied energy carbon
  • coefficients 400 selected values
  • Aim Typical usable market
  • products
  • Identifies primary secondary
  • materials

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  • THE FIVE SELECTION CRITERIA FOR ICE DATA
  • Source Extracted from studies that are
    compliance with approved methodologies/standards
    (e.g., ISO 14040 series compliant).
  • System boundaries Chosen to comply with
    cradle-to-gate embodiment. Non-fuel carbon
    emissions were included.
  • Origin (country) of data The best available
    embodied energy data from around the world has
    been adopted, although a preference was given to
    good quality UK sources.
  • Age of data Modern sources were employed
    wherever possible, because the fuel mix and
    carbon coefficients associated with power
    generators has changed over time.
  • Embodied carbon Preference given to data from
    LCA studies, but otherwise estimates were made on
    fuel split.

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  • VERIFICATION OF THE ICE INVENTORY
  • Validation of the dataset was initially
    undertaken through application and comparison
    with embodied energy carbon estimates for whole
    buildings
  • Case Studies
  • Domestic buildings (see the following figures)
  • Non-domestic buildings
  • Comparison with BedZed estimates (BRE Data)
  • Embodied energy ICE was within 1
  • Embodied carbon ICE was within 10

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  • THE PRESENT STATUS OF THE ICE DATABASE
  • The ICE database has been publicly downloadable
    via an online website see http//www.bath.ac.uk/m
    ech-eng/sert/embodied/ since April 2007. Over
    4,500 copies have now been distributed worldwide.
  • Feedback from professional users has played an
    important part in the choice of 'best values' for
    'cradle-to-gate' embodied energy carbon from
    the range found in the literature.
  • The variation in published embodied energy
    carbon data stems from differences in boundary
    definitions, age of the data sources, and rigour
    of the original life-cycle assessments.
  • Data from the ICE inventory has been
    incorporated into a
  • number of carbon footprinting tools for
    products,
  • structures and activities by various
    industrial companies
  • and government agencies.

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  • CONCLUSING REMARKS 1
  • THE ROLE OF FOOTPRINT ANALYSIS
  • Planning
  • Model alternative scenarios but a simple
    measure are rarely adequate tools for
    predicting the future, particularly the
    consequences of technological innovation.
  • Prioritise actions to address adverse impacts.
  • Monitoring
  • Determine trends in resource use and ecological
    impacts over time.
  • Evaluate local strategies to combat climate
    change.
  • Education and Awareness Raising
  • Simple to understand. They show how much natural
    capital we use in relation to how much we
    have.
  • Promote behavioural changes.

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  • CONCLUSING REMARKS 2
  • THE LIMITS TO FOOTPRINTING
  • The role of carbon and environmental footprinting
    has not gone without challenge-
  • The uncertainties and deficiencies of using
    footprints (and related
    parameters) as, albeit partial, sustainability
    indicators include problems associated with
    boundary definitions, data gathering, and the
    basis for weighing the various consumption and
    associated impacts.
  • Its adoption as a tool for decision-making in a
    policy or planning context depends on an
    understanding of these assumptions and
    uncertainties.
  • Criticisms have also been made concerning the
    dominant influence of fossil fuels in footprint
    calculations. It may underestimate the potential
    of a switch to renewable energy technologies as a
    means of lowering humanitys footprint.

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DONT TAKE ANYTHING BUT PHOTOGRAPHS, DONT
LEAVE ANYTHING BUT FOOTPRINTS Signpost seen
by the speaker, Sinharaja Rainforest Reserve,
Sri Lanka (June 2001)
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THANKS TO OUR SPONSORS AND LISTENERS
ANY QUESTIONS?
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