Autor/a

Verones, Francesca

Hellweg, Stefanie

Antón, Assumpció

Azevedo, Ligia B.

Chaudhary, Abhishek

Cosme, Nuno

Cucurachi, Stefano

de Baan, Laura

Dong, Yan

Fantke, Peter

Golsteijn, Laura

Hauschild, Michael

Heijungs, Reinout

Jolliet, Olivier

Juraske, Ronnie

Larsen, Henrik

Laurent, Alexis

Mute, Christopher L.

Margni, Manuele

Núñez, Montserrat

Owsianiak, Mikolaj

Pfister, Stephan

Ponsioen, Tommie

Preiss, Philipp

Rosenbaum, Ralph K.

Roy, Pierre-Olivier

Sala, Serenella

Steinmann, Zoran

van Zelm, Rosalie

Van Dingenen, Rita

Vieira, Marisa

Huijbregts, Mark A. J.

Fecha de publicación

2020-05-31



Resumen

Life cycle impact assessment (LCIA) is a lively field of research, and data and models are continuously improved in terms of impact pathways covered, reliability, and spatial detail. However, many of these advancements are scattered throughout the scientific literature, making it difficult for practitioners to apply the new models. Here, we present the LC‐IMPACT method that provides characterization factors at the damage level for 11 impact categories related to three areas of protection (human health, ecosystem quality, natural resources). Human health damage is quantified as disability adjusted life years, damage to ecosystem quality as global species extinction equivalents (based on potentially disappeared fraction of species), and damage to mineral resources as kilogram of extra ore extracted. Seven of the impact categories include spatial differentiation at various levels of spatial scale. The influence of value choices related to the time horizon and the level of scientific evidence of the impacts considered is quantified with four distinct sets of characterization factors. We demonstrate the applicability of the proposed method with an illustrative life cycle assessment example of different fuel options in Europe (petrol or biofuel). Differences between generic and regionalized impacts vary up to two orders of magnitude for some of the selected impact categories, highlighting the importance of spatial detail in LCIA. This article met the requirements for a gold – gold JIE data openness badge described at http://jie.click/badges.

Tipo de documento

Artículo

Versión del documento

Versión publicada

Lengua

Inglés

Materias CDU

502 - Naturaleza. Estudio, conservación y protección de la naturaleza; 504 - Ciencias del medio ambiente

Páginas

19

Publicado por

Wiley

Es versión de

Journal of Industrial Ecology

Derechos

Attribution 4.0 International

Attribution 4.0 International

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