Life-Cycle Analysis

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Discussion

Blaqswans:

"This will be key to our approach for the Thermodynamic Efficiencies of Peer Production research project:

  • Quantifications of energies embedded in materials are useful and revealing companions to standard analyses of material flows using mass or value. But a brief reflection shows that even the combination of mass, value, and energy does not provide a sufficient basis for informed and balanced assessment because it leaves out the broad category of environmental impacts. Moreover, such assessments should not be limited to costs and impacts at the production stage, because many materials are parts of products and structures that will serve for years and decades and the full consequences of their use can be appreciated only by appraising their life-long trajectories. As the OECD put it, “all the phases of organized matter and energy that are in some way related to the making and use of a product can also be linked to an impact on the environment” (OECD, 1995).
  • The discipline that is doing precisely this – quantifying objective indicators of the environmental impacts of materials during their entire life-span – is Life-Cycle Assessment (or Life-Cycle Analysis) with the acronym, LCA, now a widely accepted procedure that has been codified as part of international environmental management standards that are routinely used to evaluate the various burdens imposed by production, use and disposal (or reuse) of products, and by the performance of services (ISO, 2006a,b). LCA is now a mature analytical discipline that has its own periodical, International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment, published since 1995, and an increasing number of how-to books (Horn et al., 2009; Jolliet et al., 2013), as well as extensive life-cycle inventory databases maintained by the US National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL, 2009; 2013a), by the European Commission (EC, 2009), and by the Swiss Centre for Life Cycle Inventories (Ecoinvent, 2013).

Varieties of LCA include complete cradle-to-grave sequences (from raw materials to final disposal) and partial cradle-to-gate assessments (that is for finished products before their distribution for sale)." ([1])