Sepideh Jafarzadeh
SINTEF
17 Papers
8 Citations
Sepideh Jafarzadeh is an academic researcher from SINTEF. The author has contributed to research in topics: Efficient energy use & Fuel efficiency. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 11 publications. Previous affiliations of Sepideh Jafarzadeh include Norwegian University of Science and Technology & Amirkabir University of Technology.
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Papers
Environmental impacts of animal-based food supply chains with market characteristics.
Wenhao Chen,Wenhao Chen,Sepideh Jafarzadeh,Maitri Thakur,Guðrún Ólafsdóttir,Shraddha Mehta,Sigurdur G. Bogason,Nicholas M. Holden +7 more
TL;DR: The results show that eco-efficiency information of animal-based foods should include the full supply chain, and the effective mitigation strategy to achieve the greatest reduction should not only consider the impacts on-farm, but also detail of the downstream impacts, such as food distribution network and consumption patterns.
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Inherent Safety of Clean Fuels for Maritime Transport
TL;DR: In this article , the inherent safety performance of alternative propulsion systems at early design stages was analyzed in a case study representative of long-distance maritime transportation, and the results showed that technologies based on LNG have similar safety performances with respect to the benchmark option.
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Decarbonization of maritime transport: Sustainability assessment of alternative power systems
TL;DR: In this paper , a multi-criteria sustainability assessment methodology, based on specific indicators addressing the technological, economic, environmental, and safety performance of ship power systems is developed, and the robustness of the sustainability performance-based ranking is assessed by a Monte Carlo analysis.
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Adding perspectives to: "Global trends in carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from fuel combustion in marine fisheries from 1950 - 2016"
Friederike Ziegler,Ole Ritzau Eigaard,Robert W. R. Parker,Peter Tyedmers,Erik Skontorp Hognes,Sepideh Jafarzadeh +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used data on fishing effort to estimate carbon dioxide emissions from fuel combustion in global fisheries, and applied the model to Australian and New Zealand rock lobster trap fisheries and compared to observed fuel use, showing that the approach underestimates emissions of small-scale fisheries, while overestimating emissions of industrial fisheries.
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