"Manufacturing and LCA" - Bài đăng tạp chí (LIC)
Authors: Katsuyuki, NAKANO
Modern
industrial environmental management encompasses life-cycle thinking.
This entails considering not only the emissions and resource use of the
company’s production processes, but also the environmental consequences
of all processes related to a product’s life cycle. However, no single
actor can influence the whole life cycle of a product. To be effective,
analysis methods intended to support improvement actions should
therefore also consider the decision makers’ power to influence.
Regarding
the life cycle of a product, there are at least as many perspectives on
life-cycle thinking as there are actors. This paper presents an
approach with which manufacturing decision makers can sharpen the focus
in life-cycle assessment (LCA) from a conventional ‘products or
services’ emphasis to a company’s manufacturing processes. The method
has been developed by combining knowledge gained from earlier LCA
studies with new empirical findings from an LCA study of an SKF
manufacturing line.
We demonstrate how system
boundaries and functional units in an LCA can be defined when adding the
perspective of a manufacturing decision maker to the product life-cycle
perspective. Such analysis helps manufacturing decision makers identify
improvement potentials in their spheres of influence, by focusing on
the environmental consequences of energy and material losses in
manufacturing rather than merely accounting for the contributions of
individual stages of the life cycle to the overall environmental impact.
The method identifies and directly relates the environmental
consequences of emissions or raw material inputs in the product life
cycle to manufacturing processes. In doing so, the holistic systems
perspective in LCA is somewhat diminished in favor of the relevance of
results to manufacturing decision makers....
Mời bạn đọc tham khảo bài viết tại đường link: http://repository.vnu.edu.vn/handle/VNU_123/14229
Nhận xét
Đăng nhận xét