Title: Welcome to a course in Life Cycle Assessment
1Welcome to a course inLife Cycle Assessment
- Centre for Environmental Strategies Research
- Anna Björklund and Göran Finnveden
2- Whats the environmental impact of a PET bottle?
- Which is better PET bottles,glass bottles, or
aluminium cans?
3Energy material
Emissions
Raw material acquisition
Manufacture
Use
Waste management
- LCA covers the entire life cycle, from
cradle-to-grave - LCA calculates energy and resource use,
emissions, environment and health impacts
4The life cycle model
Raw material acquisition
Resources (e.g. raw materials, energy,land)
Process
Transport
Manufacture
Emissions to air, water, ground
Use
Waste management
5Definition of LCA
- LCA is a technique for assessing environmental
aspects and potential impacts of a product, by - compiling an inventory of relevant inputs and
outputs of a product system - evaluating potential environmental impacts
associated with those inputs and outputs - interpreting the results.
- (ISO 14040)
6Why LCA?
- System focus, avoids sub-optimization and problem
shifting. - Structured, quantitative method to analyse
complex systems.
7Short LCA history
- Waste debate and oil crisis strong incentives.
- 1969 First LCA? Resource and Environmental
Profile Analysis (REPA) of beverage packaging,
commissioned by Coca Cola. (Similar contemporary
studies in UK, Germany, Sweden) - 1980s Growing use of LCA, applied to packaging.
Mostly know to researchers. - 1991 The term LCA was defined.
- 1996 First scientific LCA journal.
- 1997 First ISO standard.
- Today LCA finds it way to public policy, design,
decision making, education.
8Applications of LCA
- Product/process design, development, improvement.
- Strategic planning (e.g. in companies,
municipalities) - Public policy
- Learning
- Eco-labelling
- Environmental produc declaration
- Marketing
9Some applications
- Environmental Systems Analysis of Pig Production
- The Impact of Feed Choice - Life Cycle Assessments for Waste
- Life Cycle Assessment of a Personal Computer and
its Effective Recycling Rate - Life Cycle Assessment of the District Heat
Distribution System - Life Cycle Assessment of the Mobile Communication
System UMTS Towards Eco-efficient Systems - LCA of Multicrystalline Silicon Photovoltaic
Systems - Life Cycle Assessment of Kerosene Used in
Aviation - Life Cycle Assessment of Wood Floor Coverings
10LCA methodology in brief
Life cycle assessment framework
Interpretation
Goal and scope definition
Inventory analysis
Impact assessment
Source ISO 14040
11ISO 14000Environmental management
- ISO 14040 LCA - Principles and framework
- ISO 14041 LCA - Goal and scope definition and
inventory analysis - ISO 14042 LCA - Life cycle impact assessment
- ISO 14043 LCA - Life cycle interpretation
- ISO 14047 LCA - Examples of application of
ISO 14042 - ISO 14048 LCA - Data documentation format
- ISO 14049 LCA - Examples of application of
ISO 14041
12Goal and scope definition
- Goal
- purpose
- intended application
- intended audience
- Scope (specification of model)
- studied product (or service)
- system boundaries processes to include, time,
place - types of impacts
- data requirements
13Goal of Danish packaging LCA
- Purpose Update LCA comparing potential
environmental impact of packaging systems. - Application Basis for decisions on packaging
systems in Denmark. - Audience General publication (external).
14Scope of Danish packaging study
- Functional unit Packaging and distribution of
1000 litres beer or softdrink. - System boundaries
- Bottles or cans that are filled and sold in
Denmark, - secondary packaging (boxes, pallets, etc.),
- all processes contributing significantly to the
life cycle impacts
15Inventory
- Draw flow chart of product system.
- Collect data of resource use and emissions of all
processes - Data sources LCA databases, reports, scientific
papers, on-site investigation, expert knowledge,
qualified guesses - Build system model (computerised in e.g. generic
LCA tool, Excel, other) - Calculate resource use and emissions of studied
product. - Present results in charts and tables.
- Iterative procedure!
16Inventories inDanish packaging study
- Inventories of
- refillable glass bottles
- disposable glass bottles
- aluminium cans
- steel cans
- refillable PET bottles
- disposable PET bottles
17Process tree glass bottle
Retail
Filling w. soda
Use
Manufacture glass bottle
Waste management
Prod. soda
Prod. lime
Prod. sand
Recycling
Landfill
Raw material extract.
Raw material extract.
Raw material extract.
18Impact assessment
- Classification Sorts inventory parameters
according to type of environemtal impact. - Characterisation Translates inventory results
(emissions, resource use) to potential
environmental impact. - Example Global warming potential (according to
EDIP) - 1 CH4 25 CO2 equivalents
- 1 N2O 320 CO2 equivalents
- 1 CO 2 CO2 equivalents
19Impact assessment in Danish packaging study
- EDIP (Danish method)
- Global warming
- Ozone depletion
- Acidification
- Eutrophication
- Photochemical smog
- Ecotoxicity water chronic/acute, soil
- Human toxicity air, water, soil
- Waste bulk, hazardous, radioactive
- Slags/ashes
- Resources
20Optional steps
- Normalisation Relates each impact of the product
system to impacts of society as a whole. Gives
perspective of relative importance. - Weighting Relates different impacts to each
other, based on subjective values.