• Apply the most appropriate pollution prevention and/or
abatement techniques
How is LCA used?
By manufacturers
Product development
Product improvement
Product comparison
By public policymakers
Environmental labelling
Steps in LCA
1) Life-cycle inventory
2) Life-cycle impact assessment
3) Life-cycle improvement analysis
Planning an LCA Project
• Determine objectives
– Why is the LCA being conducted?
• Define product under study and its
alternatives
What is its function?
What is an appropriate functional unit?
• Choose system boundaries
What inputs and outputs will be studied?
How will data be collected?
The Functional Unit
Especially critical in LCAs conducted to
compare products
Plastic VS. Paper bag
Uncertainty in Results of Life-Cycle
Inventories
• Use of regional or global data
• Poor quality data
• Unavailable data
SUMMARY
• Assumptions made when choosing system
boundaries and data sources
• LCAs are a tool for assessing and minimising
the impact of human activities.
• Life-cycle stages of a product include raw material
acquisition, manufacturing, use and disposal.
LCA techniques have been adopted in industry and the
public sector to serve a variety of purposes.
• Choices made during the planning phase of an LCA have a
profound impact on the results obtained. The choice of functional
unit, particularly when LCAs are conducted to compare products, is
especially influential.