Are LCA Studies on Bulk Mineral Waste Management Suitable for Decision Support? A Critical Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Strategy and Screening Process
- Methodology: Life Cycle Assessment.
- Type of study: Case study.
- Waste fraction: Non-hazardous bulk mineral waste materials.
- Perspective: Waste management.
- Publication type: Peer reviewed journal article.
- Language: English.
- Date of publication: After 2000 and before 15 February 2021.
2.2. Assessment Procedure and Data Extraction
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Goal and Scope Definition
3.1.1. Goal Definition
3.1.2. Functional Unit
3.1.3. Multifunctionality
- Attributional approach: “system modeling approach in which inputs and outputs are attributed to the functional unit of a product system by linking and/or partitioning the unit processes of the system according to a normative rule.”
- Consequential approach: “system modeling approach in which activities in a product system are linked so that activities are included in the product system to the extent that they are expected to change as a consequence of a change in demand for the functional unit.”
- It risks merging different sets of values and therefore blurring the lines between different value systems (e.g., those of LCA practitioner and decision-maker).
- Even if the decision-maker’s values are met by the chosen normative partitioning rule, the cart is still put in front of the horse: the best knowledge should lead decision-making, not the other way around.
3.1.4. Life Cycle Phases
3.2. Inventory Analysis
3.3. Impact Assessment
3.4. Interpretation
4. Limitations
5. Conclusions and Recommendations
- Goal definition: clearly disclose to what end the LCA is performed and consider the decision-making context in which the LCA results are likely to be applied in practice. The goal definition impacts all subsequent LCA phases, including scope definition, LCI, and LCIA.
- Functional unit: include the main functions of the systems in the functional unit. A functional unit without a function is not a functional unit.
- System boundaries/multifunctionality: design your model to represent the effects of all considered options (and the counterfactual, if applicable). Keep the cause–effect principle intact by using a consequential modeling approach, including the use of marginal data. This issue can be supported by supplementing LCA with additional methods such as material flow analysis, integrated assessment models, agent-based modeling, general and partial equilibrium models, and other approaches, as these may be more suitable for certain decision-making context situations than the linear modeling approach commonly applied in LCA [34].
- LCIA: report and justify your choice of impact categories and LCIA methods.
- Interpretation: critically assess your results regarding consistency, completeness, and sensitivity. Transparently report and discuss limitations. Draw conclusions considering these limitations. Give recommendations to decision-makers regarding the decisions identified in the goal definition phase. Highlight inconclusiveness if applicable.
- Life cycle phases: discuss whether embodied impacts of the waste materials and avoided landfilling are affected by the decision at hand. Include them in the system boundaries to the degree they are affected.
- Transport: Use case-specific data regarding transport distances and means of transport. Conduct a sensitivity analysis regarding transport distances.
- Leaching: include leaching data or clearly explain why they are omitted. For decision support, scenario-specific leaching data should represent the changes between different courses of action and/or the counterfactual.
- Substitution effects: account for substitution effects (e.g., potentially increased demand for cement when substituting natural aggregate with secondary aggregate in concrete).
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
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02 | Basti [86] | Sustainable management of debris from the L’Aquila earthquake: environmental strategies and impact assessment |
03 | Bizcocho and Llatas [15] | Inclusion of prevention scenarios in LCA of construction waste management |
04 | Blengini [87] | Life cycle of buildings, demolition and recycling potential: A case study in Turin, Italy |
05 | Blengini and Garbarino [40] | Resources and waste management in Turin (Italy): the role of recycled aggregates in the sustainable supply mix |
06 | Borghi et al. [10] | Life cycle assessment of non-hazardous Construction and Demolition Waste (CDW) management in Lombardy Region (Italy) |
07 | Butera et al. [46] | Life cycle assessment of construction and demolition waste management |
08 | Chebbi et al. [56] | Environmental assessment of EAF slag in different “end of 2nd life” |
09 | Chen et al. [88] | Life Cycle Assessment of Internal Recycling Options of Steel Slag in Chinese Iron and Steel Industry |
10 | Coelho and de Brito [89] | Influence of construction and demolition waste management on the environmental impact of buildings |
11 | Dahlbo et al. [90] | Construction and demolition waste management—a holistic evaluation of environmental performance |
12 | Di Maria et al. [16] | Downcycling versus recycling of construction and demolition waste: Combining LCA and LCC to support sustainable policy making |
13 | Dong et al. [91] | Achieving carbon emission reduction through industrial & urban symbiosis |
14 | Faleschini et al. [92] | Sustainable management of demolition waste in post-quake recovery processes: The Italian experience |
15 | Fort and Cerny [93] | Transition to circular economy in the construction industry: Environmental aspects of waste brick recycling scenarios |
16 | Guignot et al. [52] | Recycling Construction and Demolition Wastes as Building Materials: A Life Cycle Assessment |
17 | Hossain and Ng [94] | Influence of waste materials on buildings’ life cycle environmental impacts: Adopting resource recovery principle |
18 | Jain et al. [54] | Environmental life cycle assessment of construction and demolition waste recycling: A case of urban India |
19 | Karanović et al. [95] | Assessment of construction and demolition waste management in the city of Aveiro, Portugal |
20 | Klang et al. [96] | Sustainable management of demolition waste—an integrated model for the evaluation of environmental, economic and social aspects |
21 | Kua [97] | The Consequences of Substituting Sand with Used Copper Slag in Construction |
22 | Kucukvar et al. [98] | Life Cycle Assessment and Optimization-Based Decision Analysis of Construction Waste Recycling for a LEED-Certified University Building |
23 | Lee and Park [99] | Estimation of the environmental credit for the recycling of granulated blast furnace slag based on LCA |
24 | Levis et al. [100] | Quantifying the Greenhouse Gas Emission Reductions Associated with Recycling Hot Mix Asphalt |
25 | Li et al. [101] | Environmental impact assessment of mobile recycling of demolition waste in Shenzhen, China |
26 | Liu et al. [102] | Economic and Environmental Assessment of Carbon Emissions from Demolition Waste Based on LCA and LCC |
27 | Lockrey et al. [84] | Concrete recycling life cycle flows and performance from construction and demolition waste in Hanoi |
28 | Mah et al. [103] | Life cycle assessment and life cycle costing toward eco-efficiency concrete waste management in Malaysia |
29 | Mah et al. [104] | Environmental impacts of construction and demolition waste management alternatives |
30 | Mah et al. [105] | Concrete waste management decision analysis based on life cycle assessment |
31 | Martínez et al. [41] | End of life of buildings: three alternatives, two scenarios. A case study |
32 | Mastrucci et al. [106] | Geospatial characterization of building material stocks for the life cycle assessment of end-of-life scenarios at the urban scale |
33 | Mercante et al. [107] | Life cycle assessment of construction and demolition waste management systems: a Spanish case study |
34 | Miliutenko et al. [78] | Opportunities for environmentally improved asphalt recycling: the example of Sweden |
35 | Mousavi et al. [108] | Decision-based territorial life cycle assessment for the management of cement concrete demolition waste |
36 | Ortiz et al. [109] | Environmental performance of construction waste: comparing three scenarios from a case study in Catalonia, Spain |
37 | Pantini et al. [5] | Towards resource-efficient management of asphalt waste in Lombardy region (Italy): Identification of effective strategies based on the LCA methodology |
38 | Penteado and Rosado [49] | Comparison of scenarios for the integrated management of construction and demolition waste by life cycle assessment: A case study in Brazil |
39 | Ram et al. [110] | Environmental benefits of construction and demolition debris recycling: Evidence from an Indian case study using life cycle assessment |
40 | Rosado et al. [42] | Life cycle assessment of construction and demolition waste management in a large area of São Paulo State, Brazil |
41 | Simion et al. [111] | Comparing environmental impacts of natural inert and recycled construction and demolition waste processing using LCA |
42 | Simion et al. [112] | Ecological footprint applied in the assessment of construction and demolition waste integrated management |
43 | Song et al. [113] | Exploring the life cycle management of industrial solid waste in the case of copper slag |
44 | Vieira and Horvath [114] | Assessing the end-of-life impacts of buildings |
45 | Vitale et al. [115] | Life cycle assessment of the end-of-life phase of a residential building |
46 | Vossberg et al. [53] | An energetic life cycle assessment of C&D waste and container glass recycling in Cape Town, South Africa |
47 | Wang et al. [116] | Considering life-cycle environmental impacts and society’s willingness for optimizing construction and demolition waste management fee: An empirical study of China |
48 | Wang et al. [117] | Combining life cycle assessment and Building Information Modelling to account for carbon emission of building demolition waste: A case study |
49 | Wang et al. [118] | Estimating the environmental costs and benefits of demolition waste using life cycle assessment and willingness-to-pay: A case study in Shenzhen |
50 | Wang et al. [119] | Energy–environment–economy evaluations of commercial scale systems for blast furnace slag treatment: Dry slag granulation vs. water quenching |
51 | Wu et al. [120] | Quantification of carbon emission of construction waste by using streamlined LCA: a case study of Shenzhen, China |
52 | Yahya and Boussabaine [121] | Quantifying environmental impacts and eco-costs from brick waste |
53 | Yazdanbakhsh [77] | A bi-level environmental impact assessment framework for comparing construction and demolition waste management strategies |
54 | Zambrana-Vasquez et al. [122] | Analysis of the environmental performance of life-cycle building waste management strategies in tertiary buildings |
55 | Zeng et al. [123] | Greenhouse gases emissions from solid waste: an analysis of Expo 2010 Shanghai, China |
56 | Zhang et al. [124] | Eco-efficiency assessment of technological innovations in high-grade concrete recycling |
57 | Zhang et al. [125] | Co-benefits of urban concrete recycling on the mitigation of greenhouse gas emissions and land use change: A case in Chongqing metropolis, China |
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Category | Criterion | Specific for | Rationale |
---|---|---|---|
Goal definition | Is a goal defined? | LCA | ISO requirement |
Is the intended application declared? | LCA | ISO requirement | |
Is the intended audience stated? | LCA | ISO requirement | |
Is decision support identified as a goal? | DS | Derived from ISO | |
Is the supported decision identified? | DS | Derived from ISO | |
Is the decision-maker identified? | DS | Expert judgement | |
Is the temporal scope of the decision identified? | DS | Expert judgement | |
Is the spatial scope of the decision identified? | DS | Expert judgement | |
Is the quantitative scope of the decision identified? | DS | Expert judgement | |
Functional unit | Is a function defined? | LCA | ISO requirement |
Is a functional unit defined? | LCA | ISO requirement | |
Does the functional unit contain the function? | LCA | ISO requirement | |
Is a reference flow defined? | LCA | ISO requirement | |
Is the mineral waste composition defined? | MWM | Body of literature | |
Are technical properties of the mineral waste material defined? | MWM | Body of literature | |
Multifunctionality | Is the study declared as consequential LCA? | DS | Expert judgement |
Are marginal supplying technologies identified? | DS | Expert judgement | |
Is allocation avoided in the foreground system? | LCA | ISO requirement | |
Is the general approach to multifunctionality stated? | LCA | ISO requirement | |
Is the approach to multifunctionality justified? | LCA | ISO requirement | |
Is a sensitivity analysis conducted on allocation? | LCA | ISO requirement | |
Life cycle phases | Are embodied impacts either excluded or justified? | MWM | Expert judgement |
Is the inclusion/exclusion of (avoided) landfilling justified? | MWM | Expert judgement | |
Is the material processing included? | MWM | Body of literature | |
Is transport included? | MWM | Body of literature | |
Is leaching included? | MWM | Body of literature | |
Inventory analysis | Are foreground inventory data provided? | LCA | ISO requirement |
Is the background database stated? | LCA | Derived from ISO | |
Is the background database version stated? | LCA | Derived from ISO | |
Are the used datasets stated? | LCA | Derived from ISO | |
Is the system model choice in ecoinvent 3 documented? | LCA | Derived from ISO | |
Is the system model choice in ecoinvent 3 justified? | LCA | Derived from ISO | |
Are technical parameters for substitution defined? | MWM | Body of literature | |
Is a substitution factor used? | MWM | Body of literature | |
Are other substitution effects identified and quantified? | MWM | Body of literature | |
Impact assessment | Is the LCIA methodology stated? | LCA | ISO requirement |
Are choices regarding LCIA methodology justified? | LCA | ISO requirement | |
Are unweighted LCIA results provided? | LCA | ISO requirement | |
Is disregarding impact categories justified? | LCA | ISO requirement | |
Interpretation | Are significant issues identified? | LCA | ISO requirement |
Is a sensitivity analysis performed? | LCA | ISO requirement | |
Is a sensitivity check documented? | LCA | ISO requirement | |
Is a completeness check documented? | LCA | ISO requirement | |
Is a consistency check documented? | LCA | ISO requirement | |
Are limitations discussed? | LCA | ISO requirement | |
Are conclusions drawn? | LCA | ISO requirement | |
Are recommendations provided? | LCA | ISO requirement |
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Share and Cite
Dierks, C.; Hagedorn, T.; Campitelli, A.; Bulach, W.; Zeller, V. Are LCA Studies on Bulk Mineral Waste Management Suitable for Decision Support? A Critical Review. Sustainability 2021, 13, 4686. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13094686
Dierks C, Hagedorn T, Campitelli A, Bulach W, Zeller V. Are LCA Studies on Bulk Mineral Waste Management Suitable for Decision Support? A Critical Review. Sustainability. 2021; 13(9):4686. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13094686
Chicago/Turabian StyleDierks, Christian, Tabea Hagedorn, Alessio Campitelli, Winfried Bulach, and Vanessa Zeller. 2021. "Are LCA Studies on Bulk Mineral Waste Management Suitable for Decision Support? A Critical Review" Sustainability 13, no. 9: 4686. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13094686
APA StyleDierks, C., Hagedorn, T., Campitelli, A., Bulach, W., & Zeller, V. (2021). Are LCA Studies on Bulk Mineral Waste Management Suitable for Decision Support? A Critical Review. Sustainability, 13(9), 4686. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13094686