Title: Life Cycle Assessment
1Chapter 6
2LCA
- Life-cycle analysis (LCA) is a sophisticated way
of examining the total environmental impact of a
product through every step of its life -- from
obtaining raw materials all the way through
making it in a factory, selling it in a store,
using it in the home, and disposing of it.
Disposal options include incineration, burial in
a landfill, or recycling.
3What is LCA?
- Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) is a technique for
assessing the potential environmental aspects
associated with a product (or service), by - compiling an inventory of relevant inputs and
outputs, - evaluating the potential environmental impacts
associated with those inputs and outputs, - interpreting the results of the inventory and
impact phases in relation to the objectives of
the study.
(from the ISO Committee Draft 14040.3 draft on
LCA, October 1995)
4Life Cycle Assessment Stages
Inputs
Outputs
Life-Cycle Stages
Atmospheric emissions
Raw Materials Acquisition
Waterborne wastes
Manufacturing
Solid wastes
Raw materials
Use/Reuse/Maintenance
Coproducts
Energy
Recycle/Waste Management
Other releases
5Motivations for Implementing LCA
6LCA and the Regulatory Process
- LCA is voluntary in the U.S. At present
- its use is limited, but expanding
- LCA is mandatory in some European countries
- used as the basis of packaging recovery and
recycling targets
7Life Cycle Assessment
- The life-cycle stages. This is the physical
sequence of unit processes across the life-cycle. - Analysis of multiple environmental and resource
issues (i.e. inputs and outputs). LCA is not
just a single-issue tool it spreads
consideration to tradeoffs across many
environmental concerns. - Assessment. LCA extends beyond quantitative
analysis to a point where an evaluation or
judgement is made. At its simplest, this may be a
statement of what's better or what's worse.
8What is Life Cycle Assessment?
- from ISO 14040.2 Draft Life Cycle Assessment -
Principles and Guidelines - Life Cycle Assessment
- A systematic set of procedures for compiling and
examining the inputs and outputs of materials and
energy and the associated environmental impacts
directly attributable to the functioning of a
product or service system throughout its life
cycle.
9What is Life Cycle
- Life Cycle
- Consecutive and inter-linked stages of a product
or service system, from the extraction of natural
resources to the final disposal.
from ISO 14040.2 Draft Life Cycle Assessment -
Principles and Guidelines
10SETAC Definition of LCA
- Life-cycle assessment is an objective process
to evaluate the environmental burdens associated
with a product, process, or activity by
identifying and quantifying energy and material
usage and environmental releases, to assess the
impacts of those energy and material uses and
releases to the environment, and to evaluate and
implement opportunities to effect environmental
improvements. The assessment includes the entire
life-cycle of the product, process or activity,
encompassing extracting and processing raw
materials manufacturing, transportation, and
distribution use/re-use/maintenance recycling
and final disposal."
The Society of Environmental Toxicology and
Chemistry
11ISO14040 LCA Definition
- LCA is a technique for assessing the
environmental aspects and potential impacts
associated with a product by - compiling an inventory of relevant inputs and
outputs of a system - evaluating the potential environmental impacts
associated with those inputs and outputs - interpreting the results of the inventory and
impact phases in relation to the objectives of
the study.
123 Steps of LCA
- Life-cycle inventories
- involve quantifying energy and raw materials use
and the emissions associated with a product,
process or activity - Life-cycle impact analysis
- assess the impacts of the environmental loadings
identified in the life-cycle inventory
133 Steps of LCA (cont.)
- Life-cycle improvement analysis
- used to identify opportunities to reduce the
environmental impacts identified in the impact
analysis through modification of the inventory.
14Components of LCA
15Steps in the LCA of a Product
16Inventory Analysis
- define purpose
- define system boundaries
- geographic scope
- types of data used
- data collection and synthesis procedures
- data quality measures
- computational model construction
- presentation of results
17Conceptual Framework forLCA Impact Analysis
18LCA Characterization Methods
- loading
- equivalency
- inherent chemical properties
- generic exposure and effects
- site-specific exposure and effects
19Impacts of Solvent Substitutionin Printing
20Streamlining LCA Methods
- Limiting or eliminating life-cycle stages
(usually upstream or downstream stages from the
main manufacturing stage) - Focusing on specific environmental impacts or
issues - Eliminating specific inventory parameters
- Limiting or eliminating impact assessment
- Using qualitative as well as quantitative data
- Using surrogate process data
- Establishing criteria to be used as show
stoppers or knockouts - Limiting the constituents studied to those
meeting a threshold quantity (for example, ignore
raw materials comprising less than 20 by weight
of the LCI total mass)
21When Should LCA be Done?
22Benefits Of LCA
- companies can claim one product is better than
another on the basis of LCA - LCA inventory process helps to narrow in on the
area where the biggest reductions in
environmental emissions can be made - can be used to reduce production costs
23Drawbacks of LCA
- Using LCA to compare products is like comparing
apples to oranges. - For example, which is worse a product that
pollutes the air by consuming energy from
coal-fired power plants or one that disrupts
ecosystems by consuming energy from massive
hydroelectric dam projects? Both types of
pollution should be minimized if possible.
24Drawbacks (cont.)
- Comparison between heavy energy demand and heavy
water use which imposes greater environmental
burden? - How can the use of non-renewable mineral
resources like oil or gas (the ingredients of
plastics) be compared with the production of
softwoods for paper? - How should the combined impacts of the
landfilling of wastes (air and groundwater
pollution, transport impacts etc) be compared
with those produced by the burning of wastes for
energy production (predominantly emissions to
air)?
25Drawbacks (cont.)
- LCAs may give different and sometimes
contradictory conclusions about similar products. - Recycling adds more complexity to LCA.
26Who Does LCA?
- Conducted by an industry sector to enable it to
identify areas where improvements can be made, in
environmental terms. - LCA may be intended to provide environmental data
for the public or for government. - Companies use LCA for marketing and advertising,
to support claims that their products are
'environmentally friendly' or even
'environmentally superior' to those of their
rivals.
27LCA for a Womans Polyester Blouse
28Eco-Labeling
- widely used in Europe to help consumers
distinguish environmentally friendly products
from others - Germany - Blue Angel
- Netherlands - Dutch Ecolabel
- EU developing unified European program
- also addressed in ISO 14000
- only recently being used in the U.S.
- Green Seal
- can be very misleading if not done properly