1. Introduction
One of the main problems of modern society is the excessive exploitation of natural resources to support unsustainable activities and processes [
1]. This issue began to be felt as a problem after decades of rough industrial development, aimed essentially at increasing profit, without taking into account the long-term effects and consequences on human health and the material supply lack [
2]. In fact, since the earlier stages of the industrial revolution, the environmental impacts of all related human activities have been deliberately ignored, and there has been a reliance on the substantial (but not infinite) resilience of the environment to contain and neutralize any threat to or alteration of the natural conditions. Moreover, the continuous race towards technological and industrial progress of the countries participating in the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), and the late but substantial contribution posed by the developing countries, have determined exponential increases in waste generation, effluent emissions and more in general, of resource consumption and consequent depletion.
In recent decades, the scientific community has highlighted a substantial amount of evidence that suggests we have reached a point of no return, and that the evolution of modern society necessitates that we face the problems that are derived from industrial production and try to put forward effective solutions and adequate preventive measures. Profit itself should no longer be considered the only main variable describing the relationship between customers and manufacturers. The exponential increase in pollution in the world, which is linked to the demographic increase, has introduced the topic of environmental impact, and an awareness that it should not be neglected and ignored anymore. Nevertheless, the social and economic impacts are considered the fundamental variables to measure and compare for a thorough definition and quantification of the overall incidence of human activities.
Nowadays, the path that the world is following is particularly worrying, mainly because industrialized countries are characterized by societies that are currently difficult to satisfy [
3]. Every living day obliges humans to balance the consumption of the earth’s resources with its natural tendency to regenerate them [
4]. Manufacturing processes are employed in a number of production chains that transform raw materials into final objects for consumers. For example, in order to produce a mobile phone, several tens of different metals are necessary (such as aluminum, gold, rhodium, silver and copper). A T-shirt is made after the use of 0.23 kg of cotton or synthetic material, derived from crude. One loaf of bread is produced using about 0.39 kg of corn. The equivalent mass of water necessary to produce a plastic bottle containing 1 liter of drinkable water is about 1.39 L [
5,
6,
7]. This means that, in order to let one person drink 1 liter of water, another living being is deprived of 1.39 L. Even though this problem has only been felt for a couple of decades [
8], this kind of sacrifice cannot be tolerated any more. In this scenario, a transversal and highly impacting factor is the enormous need for energetic sources and assets, which make huge contributions in terms of emissions, waste generation and natural resource depletion. The global demand for energy is rapidly increasing because of population and economic growth, especially in emerging market economies. The rising demand has led to an abuse of fossil energy resources, which has created new issues and challenges. One of the possible solutions that is most agreed upon is the so-called energy transition process. However, the shift from an energy mix based on fossil fuels to low or zero carbon emissions, based on renewable energy sources, is not free from pitfalls because of the substantial need for natural resources to support the development and use of emerging technologies (e.g., metals and minerals for photovoltaic systems).
One of the main consequences of the continuous increase in industrial production volumes is the huge generation and accumulation of wastes [
9]. Every process generates discarded materials, mainly due to the use of non-recyclable raw materials, or to the high costs associated with recycling. The actual situation has both environmental and social-economic implications due to two main factors: first, the inequality in the distribution of resources; second, the necessity to reduce resource consumption [
10].
According to several studies [
11,
12,
13] performed on the modern ways of living around the world, the National Footprint and Biocapacity accounts declared in 2021 that people living in the United States would need the resources of the equivalent of almost five Earths in order to balance the consumption of raw materials with their natural regeneration. Similarly, Australian people have an impact that is quantifiable in the need of 4.6 Earths, while Russians would need 3.4. In Europe, France, Germany, Italy, Portugal and Switzerland would need between 2.8 and 2.9 Earths, followed by England and Spain with 2.6 and 2.5, respectively. On this list, China ranks among the countries with unsustainable habits and processes (i.e., the resources needed are more than 1 Earth), with an environmental footprint that is equal to the need for 2.3 Earths to balance the resource consumption. Starting from India, with 0.7 Earths, several South and Central American countries, as well as some African and Asian countries, suffer from the unequal distribution of resources, with values significantly lower than 0.5 Earths. Summing up this information and data, the average value calculated for the entire world is in the need of around 1.7 Earths to counterbalance the negative generation of resources.
Among the possible solutions aimed at reducing and regulating the consumption of natural resources, it has become necessary to substitute the linear concept of economy [
14] with the circular model [
15,
16,
17,
18,
19,
20]. In other words, the concept of waste should be eliminated from the actual concept of economy, and the route to achieve this important goal is multilevel [
21]. Generally, we are used to defining the life of an object from the cradle to the grave, considering the path of raw materials during their transformation from the manufacturing processes to the final consumers [
22]. The concept of the grave alludes to the elimination of the used objects as waste in order to substitute them with new updated ones. The concept of waste can be eliminated after setting up adequate processes to recycle, reuse or regenerate artefacts or their constitutive components. Of course, this politics starts from a reasoned choice of raw materials, based on their manufacturing processes, until the definition of their end of life, which should not only account for the immediate exigencies, but also for the long-term impact. In order to define a new balance on the earth, humans need to transform the waste step into dismantling, separation and reintroduction steps in the process chain [
23]. However, as for the example of renewable energies, which can have a non-negligible environmental impact during their entire life cycles, the individuation of the most virtuous routes is not a trivial goal.
To achieve this fundamental target, it is necessary to introduce into our daily manufacturing, consuming and scientific lives the concept of sustainability [
24,
25]. This means that we do need to use natural resources in order to reasonably satisfy the necessities of human beings, but without compromising the availabilities of those resources for future generations [
26,
27]. This goal cannot be achieved by only thinking about the profit of manufacturing processes, but by also considering the environmental, economic and social impacts. The simultaneous reduction in the social and economic impacts for a process goes under the name of equity, the intersection of social and environmental impacts defines a bearable process, while the contemporary validation of environmentally friendly and economic processes is called viability. The simultaneous intersection of bearable, equitable and viable processes defines a process as sustainable [
28,
29]. In other words, if a process is able to maximize profit, minimize the consumption of resources and energy and maximize efficiency while reducing the social impact, then it has the power to reduce the consumption rate of resources compared with their regeneration rates. This kind of analysis can be applied to energy sources as well as to material selection (e.g., for the design and production of sustainable objects). At present, these topics are among the most important issues worldwide for their present impacts on the environment and catastrophic previsions for the future. Hence, dedicated efforts for the assessment of sustainability criteria appears to be a cogent and intriguing target.
The achievement of such an ambitious goal can be obtained through the simultaneous comparison of process or material variables in terms of energy requirements, social benefits, recyclability, environmental impact, efficiency, return on investment and so on. There are hundreds of known indicators reported in the literature; however, the greatest power of this discipline is linked to the possibility of building new sets, depending on the purposes of the analysis needed [
30,
31,
32,
33].
In general, the assessment of the sustainability of a process should define numerical criteria (indicators) that can quantify its environmental, social and economic impacts (the latter including the important energetic aspects). Most of indicator sets require experimental data, the knowledge of thermodynamic, physicochemical and toxicity properties as well as mass and energy flows, operating conditions, costs and equipment specifications for their correct and tuned definition. As reported in the literature [
32,
33], the existing methodology hypothesizes the best and worst conditions that are too generalized at the global level, while our innovation compares the best and worst cases within the same materials/processes to be evaluated.
According to these statements and having in mind these general properties, in this work, a simple method for sustainability analyses was proposed through the construction of ad hoc indicators. The aim was to highlight the great power of this method, which can be easily used by everyone, even without having specific knowledge of processes and materials. In particular, in this work, two case studies were proposed related to different but complementary areas of applications: the selection of a process for energy production, and the selection of a material for industrial design and manufacturing.
2. Methods
The sustainability indicators need to be specifically defined according to the multiple aspects that generally describe a process, or the selection of a material for a manufacturing process. This means that the process and material selection cannot be described only in terms of revenues or with a basic cost-and-benefit approach, but they might also be compared from several different points of view with other equivalent choices. It is worth adding that each manufacturing field has its own properties and features; therefore, it is necessary to define specific indicators starting from the collection of data. This could be the path to follow in order to individuate a specific weakness in the process and propose a further improvement in terms of sustainability, improving its environmental and social impacts without reducing the profit derived from the production.
Regardless of the specific process under analysis, it is generally suggested to define at least two indicators of cost: one related to the initial investment, and the second to the daily operation. These values of cost should be correlated to the functional unit that better allows for a quantification of the goods produced, and that represents the base for extensive parameter analysis (e.g., mass or volume or flow rate).
In this work, the technologies currently available for the production of energy were analyzed, accounting for both renewable and non-renewable sources. For this case study, the related indicators are defined in
Table 1. The kWh produced (or its multiples) was adopted as the functional unit.
Therefore, according to
Table 1, indicator #1 was built in order to define the cost of production per kWh of power generated during the operation of the plant. Similarly, indicator #6 defines the initial investment cost of the process related to each kWh of power generated during the lifetime of that specific plant. In order to define a process in terms of sustainability, the evaluation of the revenues needs to be coupled with the calculation of several other indicators related to the environmental impact of each process currently employed for the production of energy, the social impact and the onerous management of the effluents. Indeed, indicator #2 correlates the equivalent mass of carbon dioxide emitted to the atmosphere per kWh produced, while indicator #4 defines a specific correlation between the mass of water employed for utility along the process chain and the produced kWh. It is worth observing that, in this work, we did not account for pollutant management, which can be related to the different life steps of a single process (production starting raw materials, use for production and end-of-life disposal) and requires a dedicated study. Moreover, for the main regulated pollutants, it should be assumed that each process was conceived to respect the existing regulation; hence, the emission levels of the main pollutants should be similar or at least comparable.
The efficiency of the process (i.e., the ratio among the energy output over the total energy fed to the process (in terms of equivalent fuel)) is obviously a main parameter that must be accounted for. Indicator #8 defines the average lifetime of a process plant. The social perception of a productive plant is a non-negligible aspect for a fair evaluation of the impact of an energy plant on the community. Sometimes this parameter is influenced by the bias diffused by the media, or by the effect of distorted information, but this variable concept also needs to be taken into account. In this case, the literature generally gives a dimensionless scale from 1 to 10 to define the perception of a power plant built near a community: 1 in cases of the lowest impact perception, and 10 as the highest perceived impact. Another social aspect to be considered is the number of fatalities registered in a plant per unit of power produced; this is an indicator related to the safety of the process and needs to be evaluated before defining the choice. Finally, yet importantly, each power plant has a different need for the land to be used and, namely, occupied. According to this point, indicator #9 correlates the land surface use to the amount of power generated. This indicator considers the occupation of land near a city, which is subtracted from other economic and social activities, thus representing a term of environmental and social impact.
The list of the calculated indicators reported for the comparison of energy production processes as collected from the literature [
34,
35,
36,
37,
38,
39,
40,
41,
42,
43,
44] is reported in
Table 1.
As a second case study, in this work, we focused on a comparison of different manufacturing materials. In the same manner as the first case study, it is possible to address the choice of a specific material according to defined indicators of interest. In this case, a balance between technical and sustainability properties is necessary; thus, the sustainability parameters were integrated with specific customized properties related to the use of the material. Obviously, in this case, a preliminary selection of materials is mandatory, on the basis of the technical requirements among the available alternatives.
Among the mechanical properties, tensile strength, stiffness, ductility and density cannot be considered as optimal in an absolute manner because their evaluation depends on the destination use of the investigated material. In other words, depending on the application required by the designer, many different combinations of optimal parameters can bring about the best choice in terms of both the technical result and sustainability. For instance, a stated application could need a low-density material, but with high rigidity; alternatively, it could be more appropriate to increase the ultimate tensile strength with the lowest elastic modulus. Similarly, in terms of mechanical and thermal properties (for example, conductivity), the definition of the best and worst conditions must be considered case by case in terms of the material choice for the industrial or design applications.
On the contrary, the property related to the service temperature range is almost always considered as the best if the range between the minimum and maximum temperature is large, and it is considered the worst in cases of very narrow operating ranges. Similarly, indicators related to cost and carbon dioxide emissions for material production processes are considered as the worst if maximized and the best if minimized. There are no ambiguities or biases when considering the annual production rate, which is directly related to the supply risk of the specific material. Another prominent sustainability indicator related not only to the environment but also to the production cost minimization is the recyclability fraction, expressed in terms of percentage.
The list of the selected indicators for manufacturing material comparative analysis was collected from different studies retrievable in the pertinent literature [
45,
46,
47,
48,
49,
50,
51,
52,
53,
54,
55], and it is reported in
Table 2.
The data on the indicators reported in
Table 1 and
Table 2 were collected from the literature and analyzed after proper calculations. To compare the data shown, it is necessary to create dimensionless variables, expressed in terms of percentages. This goal can be achieved using Equation (1), which was first reported by Ruiz Mercado et al. [
32,
33,
34]. The mathematical correlation defines the generalized way to calculate each specific indicator:
where “
Actual” is the value of the indicator assumed by the process/material currently analyzed; “
Best” is the value that maximizes the advantage described among the processes or materials investigated; “
Worst” is the most critical value within the class of values analyzed. The calculated ratio multiplied by 100 defines the score obtained by the single material or process, expressed in terms of percentage. In this manner, the use of this simple mathematical correlation transforms raw values into dimensionless scores, according to the difference among the worst and best ones of that specific category, thereby allowing for a combined and fair comparison of the different indicators.
According to this correlation, a score of 100% means that the process or material has the highest score related to that analyzed indicator. Each indicator type can be correlated to a best and worst value, according to the significance of the value calculated. In other words, as for the optimal criterion-set definition, the best and worst values also depend on the specific destination use. For instance, if the indicator is related to the investment cost, then the best is obviously defined as the lowest value among the processes analyzed; similarly, when the indicator is related to carbon dioxide emissions, the best value is the lowest among all the processes analyzed.
Subsequently, to combine the results related to all the scores of the indicator set, the average value of the scores (
Save) can be calculated to compare processes/materials by means of a single dimensionless value, as follows:
where
Si is the value of the
i-th sustainability indicator, and
n is their total number.
4. Conclusions
The massive development of industrial production based on the extensive use of natural resources and the extremely high energy demand has determined the urgent need to face the environmental, economic and social consequences inevitably derived. In particular, the depletion of natural resources, the generation of huge amounts of wastes and the emissions of polluting substances, especially those that are climate-changing, push for a revision of the productive paradigms of modern societies, orienting all changes in light of the concept of sustainability. As all the choices should be made aiming at the most sustainable one, there is a growing interest in defining methodologies, procedures and easy-to-apply algorithms for their thorough individuation.
The main aim of this work is to propose a methodology to select a process or material based on the definition of specific criteria, which accounts for its sustainability. The numerical criteria (indicators) are specifically related to the environmental, social, energetic and economic impacts; each of them is correlated to an indicative functional unit, which represents the basis for extensive parameter analysis (e.g., mass or volume or flow rate).
As case studies, the methodology was applied to the main technologies currently available for the production of energy, accounting for both renewable and non-renewable sources, and to the main manufacturing materials.
The main steps of the proposed methodology are as follows:
Individuation of the alternative processes/materials to be compared;
Definition of the most representative set of indicators;
Collection and calculation of numerical values of each indicator, for all the alternatives previously individuated;
Calculation of the scores, by the individuation of the best and worst among all the previous defined indicator values on the basis of the assumptions;
Calculation of an average score value and radar representation for the final comparison of processes/material.
Following these steps, it was possible to assess that hydroelectric, biomass and nuclear sources are the most sustainable options for the production of energy. Among the materials, high rigidity, elastic behavior, density and thermal conductivity are the desired properties. Thus, the best-performing material is stainless steel.
This study can be easily applied to other similar scopes or interest areas dealing with environmental, social and economic issues (i.e., to those applications in which the individuation of the most sustainable option is still an open issue). At the same time, the obtained results represent the starting point for the implementation of improvement and enhancement procedures, promoting the use of the recycling, reuse, reducing (both energy and resources employed), regenerating and repairing approaches to human activities.
As a final consideration, the proposed methodology can be easily extended to a larger number of indicators (e.g., including acidification, basification, mass or number of hazardous raw materials and other kinds of pollutant management) or performed with an alternative set, which could be objects of future investigations.