Blog Archives

Goal and Scope: Who, What, Where, When, Why, and How

This series on elements of Life Cycle Assessments (LCAs) is rounding back to the first step of conducting LCAs, defining the Goal and Scope of the study. The Goal and Scope section can be thought of the section covering the

Tagged with:
Posted in Elements of a LCA

Interpretation: Making Sense of LCAs

According to the ISO 14040 standard on life cycle assessments, there are 4 stages of an LCA: (1) Goal and Scope, (2) Inventory Analysis, (3) Impact Assessment, and (4) Interpretation. We explored Inventory Analysis, which ISO 14040 defines as “the

Tagged with:
Posted in Elements of a LCA

Sensitivity Analysis: Testing the Significance of Your Assumptions

A Life Cycle Assessment is only as good as the data and assumptions built in the LCA. As we described in the previous post on developing the function unit, many informed assumptions needed to be made about use patterns of

Tagged with:
Posted in Elements of a LCA

Life Cycle Impact Assessment: Calculating Environmental Impacts

In previous posts, we described how to construct a model of the manufacture, transportation, use, and disposal of a product from unit processes and reference flows. This process is Life Cycle Inventory (LCI) analysis. According to the ISO 14040 standard

Tagged with:
Posted in Elements of a LCA

Stating the Assumptions: Geographic Relevance and LCAs

Last post, we described how LCA models are built from unit processes, and demonstrated how the end of life scenarios for facial tissues is constructed from the following 4 unit processes from the Ecoinvent database: Disposal, paper, 11.2% water, to

Tagged with:
Posted in Elements of a LCA

Unit Processes: The Building Blocks of Life Cycle Assessments

In the last post, we explored how reference flows are calculated, by making careful, thought-out assumptions and well-applied research. In our exploration of the Ecosystem Analytics Inc. LCA on cloth handkerchief use versus disposable facial tissues, we demonstrated how reference

Tagged with:
Posted in Elements of a LCA

Reference Flows in a Complex World: Making Appropriate Assumptions

Last post, we introduced the concept of reference flows, which are a measure of the outputs from processes required to fulfill the function expressed by the functional unit of the LCA. We also illustrated how the reference flows are calculated

Tagged with:
Posted in Elements of a LCA

Reference Flows: The Work Horses of Life Cycle Assessments

In the previous post on quantifying the functional unit, I described the studies, assumptions, and calculations used to develop the reference amount used to compare two product alternatives. Since LCA is based on the function of the product, and since

Tagged with:
Posted in Elements of a LCA

System Boundaries: Looking at the Whole Picture

Life Cycle Assessments aim to understand the impacts of products, services, and organizations over the entire life cycle, from manufacture and disposal. Still, even when a LCA does model impacts from cradle-to-grave, there still can be deviances from what is

Tagged with:
Posted in Elements of a LCA

How Functional Units Are Developed and Quantified

As I described in the previous post, the functional unit serves as the reference unit for the study, normalizing all inputs and outputs to it, and enables comparisons between products with similar functions. It is generally expressed in qualitative terms,

Tagged with:
Posted in Elements of a LCA
Archives