Literature DB >> 20180562

Accounting for ecosystem services in Life Cycle Assessment, Part II: toward an ecologically based LCA.

Yi Zhang1, Anil Baral, Bhavik R Bakshi.   

Abstract

Despite the essential role of ecosystem goods and services in sustaining all human activities, they are often ignored in engineering decision making, even in methods that are meant to encourage sustainability. For example, conventional Life Cycle Assessment focuses on the impact of emissions and consumption of some resources. While aggregation and interpretation methods are quite advanced for emissions, similar methods for resources have been lagging, and most ignore the role of nature. Such oversight may even result in perverse decisions that encourage reliance on deteriorating ecosystem services. This article presents a step toward including the direct and indirect role of ecosystems in LCA, and a hierarchical scheme to interpret their contribution. The resulting Ecologically Based LCA (Eco-LCA) includes a large number of provisioning, regulating, and supporting ecosystem services as inputs to a life cycle model at the process or economy scale. These resources are represented in diverse physical units and may be compared via their mass, fuel value, industrial cumulative exergy consumption, or ecological cumulative exergy consumption or by normalization with total consumption of each resource or their availability. Such results at a fine scale provide insight about relative resource use and the risk and vulnerability to the loss of specific resources. Aggregate indicators are also defined to obtain indices such as renewability, efficiency, and return on investment. An Eco-LCA model of the 1997 economy is developed and made available via the web (www.resilience.osu.edu/ecolca). An illustrative example comparing paper and plastic cups provides insight into the features of the proposed approach. The need for further work in bridging the gap between knowledge about ecosystem services and their direct and indirect role in supporting human activities is discussed as an important area for future work.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20180562     DOI: 10.1021/es900548a

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Sci Technol        ISSN: 0013-936X            Impact factor:   9.028


  3 in total

1.  USEEIO: a New and Transparent United States Environmentally-Extended Input-Output Model.

Authors:  Yi Yang; Wesley W Ingwersen; Troy R Hawkins; Michael Srocka; David E Meyer
Journal:  J Clean Prod       Date:  2017-08       Impact factor: 9.297

2.  Towards integrating the ecosystem services cascade framework within the Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) cause-effect methodology.

Authors:  Benedetto Rugani; Danielle Maia de Souza; Bo P Weidema; Jane Bare; Bhavik Bakshi; Blane Grann; John M Johnston; Ana Laura Raymundo Pavan; Xinyu Liu; Alexis Laurent; Francesca Verones
Journal:  Sci Total Environ       Date:  2019-07-05       Impact factor: 7.963

3.  LCIA framework and cross-cutting issues guidance within the UNEP-SETAC Life Cycle Initiative.

Authors:  Francesca Verones; Jane Bare; Cécile Bulle; Rolf Frischknecht; Michael Hauschild; Stefanie Hellweg; Andrew Henderson; Olivier Jolliet; Alexis Laurent; Xun Liao; Jan Paul Lindner; Danielle Maia de Souza; Ottar Michelsen; Laure Patouillard; Stephan Pfister; Leo Posthuma; Valentina Prado; Brad Ridoutt; Ralph K Rosenbaum; Serenella Sala; Cassia Ugaya; Marisa Vieira; Peter Fantke
Journal:  J Clean Prod       Date:  2017-09-10       Impact factor: 9.297

  3 in total

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