IMPACT 2002+: A new life cycle impact assessment methodology
Olivier Jolliet,Manuele Margni,Raphaël Charles,Sebastien Humbert,Jérôme Payet,Gerald Rebitzer,Ralph K. Rosenbaum +6 more
TL;DR: The IMPACT 2002+ method as mentioned in this paper proposes a feasible implementation of a combined midpoint/damage approach, linking all types of life cycle inventory results (elementary flows and other interventions) via 14 midpoint categories to four damage categories.
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Abstract: The new IMPACT 2002+ life cycle impact assessment methodology proposes a feasible implementation of a combined midpoint/damage approach, linking all types of life cycle inventory results (elementary flows and other interventions) via 14 midpoint categories to four damage categories. For IMPACT 2002+, new concepts and methods have been developed, especially for the comparative assessment of human toxicity and ecotoxicity. Human Damage Factors are calculated for carcinogens and non-carcinogens, employing intake fractions, best estimates of dose-response slope factors, as well as severities. The transfer of contaminants into the human food is no more based on consumption surveys, but accounts for agricultural and livestock production levels. Indoor and outdoor air emissions can be compared and the intermittent character of rainfall is considered. Both human toxicity and ecotoxicity effect factors are based on mean responses rather than on conservative assumptions. Other midpoint categories are adapted from existing characterizing methods (Eco-indicator 99 and CML 2002). All midpoint scores are expressed in units of a reference substance and related to the four damage categories human health, ecosystem quality, climate change, and resources. Normalization can be performed either at midpoint or at damage level. The IMPACT 2002+ method presently provides characterization factors for almost 1500 different LCI-results, which can be downloaded at http://www.epfl.ch/impact
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Citations
Water footprint profile of crop-based vegetable oils and waste cooking oil: Comparing two water scarcity footprint methods
Carla Caldeira,Paula Quinteiro,Érica Geraldes Castanheira,Anne-Marie Boulay,Ana Cláudia Dias,Luís Arroja,Fausto Freire +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared the water footprint profiles of four feedstocks used for biodiesel production: palm, soya, rapeseed and waste cooking oil (WCO) using two impact assessment methods: water stress indices (WSIs) and the other on the available water remaining (AWARE) indicator.
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Life cycle assessment of biopolymers
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- 01 Jan 2016
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the application of the life cycle assessment (LCA) methodology to biomass-derived polymers and present case studies of biopolymers used in several sectors with a major focus on the building sector.
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Carbon management and environmental consequences of agricultural biomass in a Danish Renewable Energy strategy
Lorie Hamelin
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TL;DR: In this article, a life cycle inventory of Danish agricultural land from food/feed crops to energy crops is built and described, which relates the input and output flows from and to the environment of 528 different crop systems, including seven crops (annuals and perennials), two soil types (sandy loam and sand), two climate types (wet and dry), three initial soil carbon level (high, average, low), two time horizons for soil carbon changes (20 and 100 years), two residues management practices (removal and incorporation into soil) as well as
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Material flow, economic and environmental life cycle performances of informal electronic waste recycling in a Thai community
Aubrey L. Arain,Richard L. Neitzel,Kowit Nambunmee,Roland Hischier,Siripond Jindaphong,Jesse Austin-Breneman,Olivier Jolliet +6 more
TL;DR: In this article , the authors performed a combined material flow analysis and life cycle assessment (LCA) analysis of four household appliances (washing machine, refrigerator, Cathode Ray Tube (CRT) television, fan) in an informal e-waste recycling community in Thailand.
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Life Cycle Assessment in the Livestock and Derived Edible Products Sector
Rocco Roma,Sara Corrado,Annalisa De Boni,Maria Bonaventura Forleo,Valentina Fantin,Michele Moretti,Nadia Palmieri,Andrea Vitali,De Camillis Camillo +8 more
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide an overview of the structural and economic characteristics of the most significant livestock supply chain and its main environmental problems, providing a description of the international state of the art of LCA implementations for livestock.
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