Attributional & Consequential Life Cycle Assessment: Definitions, Conceptual Characteristics and Modelling Restrictions

To assess the potential environmental impact of human/industrial systems, life cycle assessment (LCA) is a very common method. There are two prominent types of LCA, namely attributional (ALCA) and consequential (CLCA). A lot of literature covers these approaches, but a general consensus on what they...

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Main Authors: Thomas Schaubroeck, Simon Schaubroeck, Reinout Heijungs, Alessandra Zamagni, Miguel Brandão, Enrico Benetto
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-07-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
ISO
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/13/7386
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spelling doaj-2e837f16ff044b2294bdef3fda2145bf2021-07-15T15:47:37ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502021-07-01137386738610.3390/su13137386Attributional & Consequential Life Cycle Assessment: Definitions, Conceptual Characteristics and Modelling RestrictionsThomas Schaubroeck0Simon Schaubroeck1Reinout Heijungs2Alessandra Zamagni3Miguel Brandão4Enrico Benetto5Luxembourg Institute of Science and Technology, 5 Avenue des Hauts-Fourneaux, Esch-sur-Alzette, 4362 Luxembourg, LuxembourgSuda Limited, Hong Kong, ChinaInstitute of Environmental Sciences (CML), Leiden University, Einsteinweg 2, 2333 CC Leiden, The NetherlandsEcoinnovazione srl spin-off ENEA, Via Ferrarese 3, 40128 Bologna, ItalyDivision of Sustainability Assessment and Management, Department of Sustainable Development, Environmental Science and Engineering, School of Architecture and the Built Environment, KTH-Royal Institute of Technology, 100 44 Stockholm, SwedenLuxembourg Institute of Science and Technology, 5 Avenue des Hauts-Fourneaux, Esch-sur-Alzette, 4362 Luxembourg, LuxembourgTo assess the potential environmental impact of human/industrial systems, life cycle assessment (LCA) is a very common method. There are two prominent types of LCA, namely attributional (ALCA) and consequential (CLCA). A lot of literature covers these approaches, but a general consensus on what they represent and an overview of all their differences seems lacking, nor has every prominent feature been fully explored. The two main objectives of this article are: (1) to argue for and select definitions for each concept and (2) specify all conceptual characteristics (including translation into modelling restrictions), re-evaluating and going beyond findings in the state of the art. For the first objective, mainly because the validity of interpretation of a term is also a matter of consensus, we argue the selection of definitions present in the 2011 UNEP-SETAC report. ALCA attributes a share of the potential environmental impact of the world to a product life cycle, while CLCA assesses the environmental consequences of a decision (e.g., increase of product demand). Regarding the second objective, the product system in ALCA constitutes all processes that are linked by physical, energy flows or services. Because of the requirement of additivity for ALCA, a double-counting check needs to be executed, modelling is restricted (e.g., guaranteed through linearity) and partitioning of multifunctional processes is systematically needed (for evaluation per single product). The latter matters also hold in a similar manner for the impact assessment, which is commonly overlooked. CLCA, is completely consequential and there is no limitation regarding what a modelling framework should entail, with the coverage of co-products through substitution being just one approach and not the only one (e.g., additional consumption is possible). Both ALCA and CLCA can be considered over any time span (past, present & future) and either using a reference environment or different scenarios. Furthermore, both ALCA and CLCA could be specific for average or marginal (small) products or decisions, and further datasets. These findings also hold for life cycle sustainability assessment.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/13/7386multifunctionalitysystem boundaryISOlife cycle inventoryattributionalconsequential
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thomas Schaubroeck
Simon Schaubroeck
Reinout Heijungs
Alessandra Zamagni
Miguel Brandão
Enrico Benetto
spellingShingle Thomas Schaubroeck
Simon Schaubroeck
Reinout Heijungs
Alessandra Zamagni
Miguel Brandão
Enrico Benetto
Attributional & Consequential Life Cycle Assessment: Definitions, Conceptual Characteristics and Modelling Restrictions
Sustainability
multifunctionality
system boundary
ISO
life cycle inventory
attributional
consequential
author_facet Thomas Schaubroeck
Simon Schaubroeck
Reinout Heijungs
Alessandra Zamagni
Miguel Brandão
Enrico Benetto
author_sort Thomas Schaubroeck
title Attributional & Consequential Life Cycle Assessment: Definitions, Conceptual Characteristics and Modelling Restrictions
title_short Attributional & Consequential Life Cycle Assessment: Definitions, Conceptual Characteristics and Modelling Restrictions
title_full Attributional & Consequential Life Cycle Assessment: Definitions, Conceptual Characteristics and Modelling Restrictions
title_fullStr Attributional & Consequential Life Cycle Assessment: Definitions, Conceptual Characteristics and Modelling Restrictions
title_full_unstemmed Attributional & Consequential Life Cycle Assessment: Definitions, Conceptual Characteristics and Modelling Restrictions
title_sort attributional & consequential life cycle assessment: definitions, conceptual characteristics and modelling restrictions
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2021-07-01
description To assess the potential environmental impact of human/industrial systems, life cycle assessment (LCA) is a very common method. There are two prominent types of LCA, namely attributional (ALCA) and consequential (CLCA). A lot of literature covers these approaches, but a general consensus on what they represent and an overview of all their differences seems lacking, nor has every prominent feature been fully explored. The two main objectives of this article are: (1) to argue for and select definitions for each concept and (2) specify all conceptual characteristics (including translation into modelling restrictions), re-evaluating and going beyond findings in the state of the art. For the first objective, mainly because the validity of interpretation of a term is also a matter of consensus, we argue the selection of definitions present in the 2011 UNEP-SETAC report. ALCA attributes a share of the potential environmental impact of the world to a product life cycle, while CLCA assesses the environmental consequences of a decision (e.g., increase of product demand). Regarding the second objective, the product system in ALCA constitutes all processes that are linked by physical, energy flows or services. Because of the requirement of additivity for ALCA, a double-counting check needs to be executed, modelling is restricted (e.g., guaranteed through linearity) and partitioning of multifunctional processes is systematically needed (for evaluation per single product). The latter matters also hold in a similar manner for the impact assessment, which is commonly overlooked. CLCA, is completely consequential and there is no limitation regarding what a modelling framework should entail, with the coverage of co-products through substitution being just one approach and not the only one (e.g., additional consumption is possible). Both ALCA and CLCA can be considered over any time span (past, present & future) and either using a reference environment or different scenarios. Furthermore, both ALCA and CLCA could be specific for average or marginal (small) products or decisions, and further datasets. These findings also hold for life cycle sustainability assessment.
topic multifunctionality
system boundary
ISO
life cycle inventory
attributional
consequential
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/13/7386
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