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Aurora Jensen edited this page Apr 16, 2020 · 19 revisions

Welcome to the LifeCycleAssessment_Toolkit wiki!

This page will provide an overview of LCA concepts and best practices.

THE BASICS

Life Cycle Assessment (LCA)

LCA is a methodology used to quantify environmental impacts of a product or process over its lifetime using biophysical indicators such as Global Warming Potential, Eutrophication Potential, Ozone Depletion Potential, Smog Formation Potential, Acidification Potential, etc.

Embodied Carbon
Embodied carbon is usually used as shorthand for the Global Warming Potential impacts associated with sourcing and extracting building materials, manufacturing, construction, demolition, maintenance and end-of-life processes

What units are used for embodied carbon?
Embodied carbon is used as shorthand for Global Warming Potential (GWP). GWP is measured in carbon dioxide equivalents (kgCO2e). This unit converts all emissions that contribute to global warming, such as CH4, into CO2e by multiplying by their relative strength in producing warming.

What is this LCA good for?
LCA is most useful for relative, rather than absolute, comparisons. Ideally the analysis can be used for comparing design options, making material selections, and setting design priorities.

What is biogenic carbon?
Biogenic carbon is the process of carbon sequestration that takes place during the growth phase of bio-based materials, and is usually assigned during the cradle-to-gate impacts. Some LCAs account for these processes, others do not. If carbon sequestration is accounted for, it is best practice to account for the amount of this carbon that is released at end-of-life.