Life-cycle assessment Flashcards
1
Q
List the four phases that we distinguish in LCA.
A
- Goal and scope
- Goal? Why?
- Identify environmental bottle necks in a product system
- Compare product systems with the same service
- Assess different improvement options for a product
- Compare different product designs
- To label/evaluate products
- Identify prospects of a new product system to predict environmental feasibility
- Methodological choices that should be made are:
- What product, process and function?
- What is the functional unit as basis for comparison?
- What are the system boundaries?
- Which environmental impacts are being considered?
- Goal? Why?
- Inventory: A list of environmental interventions required for your functional unit. Interventions are exchanges with nature, e.g. emissions to air, soil or water (CO2, CH4, Particulate Matter, Lead etc.); Resource extractions (materials, energy, land, water).
- Identify processes (flow diagram)
- Identify interventions per unit process + quantify
- Manually for foreground
- From databases for background
- Allocation may be necessary
- Quantify relation of processes to function unit
- How much of each process do I need?
- Sum total interventions over all processes per FU
- Impact assessment
- We have a list of environmental interventions, so what’s next?
- Depending on the goal of the study one can assess one or a few interventions of interest
- Or
- Quantify impact per impact category: Life Cycle Impact Assessment ( LCIA) methods. Choose the impact category using a midpoint indicator for a particular problem.
- One inventory item may contribute to multiple impact categories! E.g. NOx contributes to photochemical oxidant formation; aquatic toxicity; terrestrial acidification. So to calculate use Score impact per impact category :
- S = sumx of ( Ix*Qx), where S = impact score, I = Intervention ( kg), Q = Characterisation factor
- We have a list of environmental interventions, so what’s next?
- Interpretation
- Interpret your study in relation to the study goal
- Evaluate the robustness
- Draw conclusions and make recommendations through:
- Contribution Analysis
- What is main environmental impact?
- What is the most important life cycle stage?
- Analysis towards assumptions
- Sensitivity analysis (assumptions)
- Uncertainty analysis
- Improvement options
- Possible changes in design, material or product use
- Contribution Analysis
- Interpret your study in relation to the study goal
2
Q
What is Life Cycle Assessment?
A
- LCA is a systematic method to quantify and evaluate potential environmental impact of product systems by:
- compiling the environmental inputs and outputs
- evaluating their potential environmental impacts ( broad range of environmental impacts)
- Throughout the entire life cycle of a product system (i.e. from cradle to grave)
3
Q
What can LCA be used for?
A
- Product development and improvement
- Public policy
- Marketing:
- Eco-labelling scheme
- Environmental claims
- Environmental product declaration
4
Q
What is functional unit in LCA?
A
- Serves as the basis for your LCA
- Represents the function of the product or service you assess
- All inputs and environmental impacts are expressed on the basis of this unit
- E.g. transport of 1 person over 1 km
5
Q
What is the problem of allocation?
A
- Occurs in multifunctional processes: multi-output processes ( co-production); multi-input processes; recovery and recycling processes
- Hard to decide where and how much of the burden (emissions) should be allocated
6
Q
What are the different types of allocation?
A
- Causal relations ( e.g. consider heat as a free by-product, so 0 burden to heat
7
Q
What are the examples of midpoint impact categories?
A
- Resources:
- Abiotic resources
- Biotic resources
- Land use
- Water use
- Pollution:
- Climate change
- Ozone depletion
- Human toxicity
- Ecotoxicity
- Acidification
- Eutrophication
- Photochemical ozone formation
- Fine dust formation
- Radiation
- Odour
- Noise
- Physical stress:
- Ecosystem/ landscape
- Victims
8
Q
What to do if there are too many impact categories and products may be better according to one indicator, worse according to another?
A
- Normalization & Weigthing
- Express impact relative to reference (e.g. average EU citizen)
- Give weights to the categories (similar to MCA)
- Endpoint indicators
- Choose a few endpoints you think are particularly important e.g. damage to human health; damage to ecosystem quality; damage to resources.
9
Q
What are the advantages and disadvantages of using endpoint indicators?
A
- Advantages
- Easy to communicate (limited number of categories)
- Represents what we ultimately care about
- Disadvantages
- Highly uncertain due to all the modelling of (future) damage
- Because of this uncertainty, reluctance to use these endpoint models