| Literature DB >> 30241296 |
Shanshan Wang1,2, Weifeng Wang3,4, Hongqiang Yang5,6.
Abstract
Carbon footprint (CF) analysis is widely used to quantify the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions of a product during its life cycle. A number of protocols, such as Publicly Available Specification (PAS) 2050, GHG Protocol Product Standard (GHG Protocol), and ISO 14067 Carbon Footprint of Products (ISO 14067), have been developed for CF calculations. This study aims to compare the criteria and implications of the three protocols. The medium-density fiberboard (MDF) (functional unit: 1 m³) has been selected as a case study to illustrate this comparison. Different criteria, such as the life cycle stage included, cut-off criteria, biogenic carbon treatment, and other requirements, were discussed. A cradle-to-gate life cycle assessment (LCA) for MDF was conducted. The CF values were -667.75, -658.42, and 816.92 kg of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO₂e) with PAS 2050, GHG protocol, and ISO 14067, respectively. The main reasons for the different results obtained were the application of different cut-off criteria, exclusion rules, and the treatment of carbon storage. A cradle-to-grave assessment (end-of-life scenarios: landfill and incineration) was also performed to identify opportunities for improving MDF production. A sensitivity analysis to assess the implications of different end-of-life disposals was conducted, indicating that landfill may be preferable from a GHG standpoint. The comparison of these three protocols provides insights for adopting appropriate methods to calculate GHG emissions for the MDF industry. A key finding is that for both LCA practitioners and policy-makers, PAS 2050 is preferentially recommended to assess the CF of MDF.Entities:
Keywords: carbon storage; environmental hotspots; greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions; life cycle assessment (LCA); publicly available specification (PAS) 2050
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30241296 PMCID: PMC6211079 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph15102060
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
An overview of key aspects specified in carbon footprint protocols: Publicly Available Specification (PAS) 2050, Greenhouse Gas Protocol Product Standard (GHG Protocol), and ISO 14067 Carbon Footprint of Products (ISO 14067).
| Specifications and Requirements | PAS 2050 | GHG Protocol | ISO 14067 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Goals | To provide a uniform specifications for GHG emissions of goods and services | To provide detailed guidelines on accounting and reporting | To standardize the quantification process and the communication of GHG emissions | ||
| Life cycle stage included | Cradle-to-grave | Cradle-to-grave | Cradle-to-grave | ||
| Cradle-to-gate | |||||
| Gate-to-gate | |||||
| Cradle-to-gate | Cradle-to-gate | Partial life cycle | |||
| Cut-off criteria | Exclusion based on materiality (<1%); at least 95% of the complete product life cycle must be included; no scale-up requirement to account for 100% | No cut-off criteria exist, because 100% completeness is necessary | No specific criteria available | ||
| Capital goods | Excluded | Excluded, but encouraged to be included when relevant | Excluded if they do not significantly affect the overall conclusions | ||
| Biogenic carbon | Carbon storage | Stored carbon within 100 years shall be recorded and accounted for in the CF calculations | For cradle-to-gate system, credit is given to biogenic carbon storage | If carbon storage is calculated, then it shall be separately reported but not included in the CF result | |
| Delayed emissions | A weighting factor is included and proposed | Shall a not be included | Shall not be included | ||
| Other exclusions | Land-use change | Specific procedure and provides default soil emissions per country | Provides guidance for determining attributable impacts | Direct land-use change shall be separately documented; indirect land-use change should be considered | |
| Others | Other exclusions include the transport of workers to their workplace and consumers to purchase sites, human energy inputs to the process, and animals providing transport services | ||||
| Allocation |
Avoiding allocation by process subdivision or system boundary expansion Supplementary requirements Economic allocation |
Avoiding allocation by process subdivision and redefining the functional unit or system expansion Physical relationships Economic or other allocation methods | |||
| Global warming potential | 100 years | ||||
a Shall mean recommendation.
Figure 1Cradle-to-gate system boundary of medium-density fiberboard (MDF) production in China.
Figure 2Stages considered within the cradle-to-gate system boundary in this study.
Materials and energy excluded from the cradle-to-gate assessment due to cut-off criteria.
| Materials and Energy | Analyzed Protocols | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| PAS 2050 | GHG Protocol a | ISO 14067 b | |
| Chemicals | Ammonium chloride | None | Ammonium chloride |
| Sodium hydroxide | |||
| Herbicide | |||
| Sodium hydroxide | Paraffin wax | ||
| Paraffin wax | K fertilizer | ||
| Energy | Energy for seedling cultivation | None | Gasoline for harvesting |
| Energy for tree plantation | |||
| Energy for total thinning | |||
a Under this protocol, the present study considered all of the unit processes significant to conduct a full life cycle inventory. b Under this protocol, a flow of less than 1% of the cumulative mass or energy was excluded from the boundary.
Figure 3Carbon storage and delayed emissions for end-of-life treatment (incineration and landfill).
Data sources for activity data and emission factors used to quantify the carbon footprint of medium-density fiberboard (MDF). UF: urea-formaldehyde.
| Stages | Data Source | |
|---|---|---|
| Activity Data | Emission Factor | |
| On-site industrial process | ||
| Wood fuels for energy | Surveyed company | Ecoinvent 3.0 [ |
| Electricity | Surveyed company | NDRC a |
| Off-site process | ||
| Capital goods | Frischknecht et al. [ | Frischknecht et al. [ |
| Energy for forestry extraction | ||
| Petroleum | Lun et al. [ | IPCC [ |
| Gasoline | Lun et al. [ | IPCC [ |
| Diesel | Lun et al. [ | IPCC [ |
| Electricity | Lun et al. [ | NDRC |
| Fertilizer and biocide | Lun et al. [ | West et al. [ |
| Chemical production | ||
| Formaldehyde | Surveyed company | CLCD [ |
| Urea | Surveyed company | CLCD [ |
| Ammonium chloride | Surveyed company | Ecoinvent 3.0 [ |
| Sodium hydroxide | Surveyed company | ELCD [ |
| Paraffin wax | Surveyed company | Ecoinvent 3.0 [ |
| UF resin production | Surveyed company | Zhang [ |
| Transports | ||
| Distances | Surveyed company and national reports b | CLCD [ |
| Fossil fuels | Surveyed company | CLCD [ |
| End-of-life disposal | Demertzi et al. [ | |
| Energy for landfill | ||
| Electricity | NDRC | |
| Diesel | IPCC [ | |
| Energy for incineration | Demertzi et al. [ | |
| Electricity | NDRC | |
| Diesel | IPCC [ | |
| Natural gas | IPCC [ | |
a National Development and Reform Commission, 2016. b Data obtained as average haul distances of goods in China, 2016. Referring to 2016 China Statistical Yearbook. IPCC: Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change; CLCD: Chinese Life Cycle Database; ELCD: European Reference Life Cycle Database.
Figure 4Cradle-to-gate life cycle carbon footprint of MDF quantified by PAS 2050, GHG Protocol, and ISO 14067.
Figure 5Carbon footprint of MDF quantified by PAS 2050 (cradle-to-grave assessment). S0: scenario 0; S1: scenario 1; S2: scenario 2.