Promouvoir la durabilité par l’analyse du cycle de vie des produits

In this article, we propose a way to analyze the impact of a product’s life cycle on the triple bottom line (social, environmental, and economic) — that corporate sustainability concept so often described as the reconciliation of the Triple P (People, Planet, and Profit) — to move beyond the excesse...

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Main Authors: Michel Gueldry, James Knuckles
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: Éditions en environnement VertigO 2012-10-01
Series:VertigO
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/vertigo/12207
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spelling doaj-52206c5e9e924b3fa11a54ea7db4d7b62021-09-02T17:46:12ZfraÉditions en environnement VertigOVertigO1492-84422012-10-0112210.4000/vertigo.12207Promouvoir la durabilité par l’analyse du cycle de vie des produitsMichel GueldryJames KnucklesIn this article, we propose a way to analyze the impact of a product’s life cycle on the triple bottom line (social, environmental, and economic) — that corporate sustainability concept so often described as the reconciliation of the Triple P (People, Planet, and Profit) — to move beyond the excesses and contradictions inherent to the current unsustainable system, which can be described as the Triple C (Carboniferous Consumer Capitalism). Our analysis of the inputs and outputs that constitute a product’s life cycle connects the three complementary dimensions identified by Hendrickson et al., namely “inventory, impact, and improvement.” In this manner, we first situate our analysis among the predominant ideas in the field of life cycle analysis (LCA). We then propose a link between the LCA inputs/outputs inventory and its broader impacts, or, as Marc J. Epstein and Bill Birchard, well-known corporate social responsibility consultants in the United States, write, “counting what counts.” This LCA evaluation allows for a discussion of the practical improvement of business operations through an integrated accounting of what counts. Our methodology facilitates a decision hierarchy, and offers a way to minimize the negative impacts of a product’s life cycle, to augment the positive impact of a product’s life cycle, and, finally, to serve a greater end than just profit maximization.http://journals.openedition.org/vertigo/12207analyse des processuscomptabilité intégréecycle de vie des produitsecodesigntriple impératif
collection DOAJ
language fra
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michel Gueldry
James Knuckles
spellingShingle Michel Gueldry
James Knuckles
Promouvoir la durabilité par l’analyse du cycle de vie des produits
VertigO
analyse des processus
comptabilité intégrée
cycle de vie des produits
ecodesign
triple impératif
author_facet Michel Gueldry
James Knuckles
author_sort Michel Gueldry
title Promouvoir la durabilité par l’analyse du cycle de vie des produits
title_short Promouvoir la durabilité par l’analyse du cycle de vie des produits
title_full Promouvoir la durabilité par l’analyse du cycle de vie des produits
title_fullStr Promouvoir la durabilité par l’analyse du cycle de vie des produits
title_full_unstemmed Promouvoir la durabilité par l’analyse du cycle de vie des produits
title_sort promouvoir la durabilité par l’analyse du cycle de vie des produits
publisher Éditions en environnement VertigO
series VertigO
issn 1492-8442
publishDate 2012-10-01
description In this article, we propose a way to analyze the impact of a product’s life cycle on the triple bottom line (social, environmental, and economic) — that corporate sustainability concept so often described as the reconciliation of the Triple P (People, Planet, and Profit) — to move beyond the excesses and contradictions inherent to the current unsustainable system, which can be described as the Triple C (Carboniferous Consumer Capitalism). Our analysis of the inputs and outputs that constitute a product’s life cycle connects the three complementary dimensions identified by Hendrickson et al., namely “inventory, impact, and improvement.” In this manner, we first situate our analysis among the predominant ideas in the field of life cycle analysis (LCA). We then propose a link between the LCA inputs/outputs inventory and its broader impacts, or, as Marc J. Epstein and Bill Birchard, well-known corporate social responsibility consultants in the United States, write, “counting what counts.” This LCA evaluation allows for a discussion of the practical improvement of business operations through an integrated accounting of what counts. Our methodology facilitates a decision hierarchy, and offers a way to minimize the negative impacts of a product’s life cycle, to augment the positive impact of a product’s life cycle, and, finally, to serve a greater end than just profit maximization.
topic analyse des processus
comptabilité intégrée
cycle de vie des produits
ecodesign
triple impératif
url http://journals.openedition.org/vertigo/12207
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AT jamesknuckles promouvoirladurabiliteparlanalyseducycledeviedesproduits
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