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Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? © 2015 Northwestern University. How Green is That Product? An Introduction to Life Cycle Environmental Assessment Coursera Lecture Notes March 2015 Prepared by: Eric Masanet and Yuan Chang McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science Northwestern University Evanston, IL, USA

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How Green is That Product Lecture Notes Week 8

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  • Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    How Green is That Product?

    An Introduction to Life Cycle Environmental Assessment

    Coursera Lecture Notes

    March 2015

    Prepared by:

    Eric Masanet and Yuan Chang

    McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science

    Northwestern University

    Evanston, IL, USA

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    Table of Contents About these lecture notes ...................................................................................................................... 3

    Lecture 1: The life-cycle perspective and course goals .......................................................................... 4

    Lecture 1 Supplement ............................................................................................................................ 8

    Lecture 2: Understanding unit processes ............................................................................................. 10

    Lecture 2 Supplement .......................................................................................................................... 16

    Lecture 3: Constructing unit process inventories: Part 1 ..................................................................... 18

    Lecture 3 Supplement .......................................................................................................................... 23

    Lecture 4: Constructing unit process inventories: Part 2 ..................................................................... 25

    Lecture 4 Supplement .......................................................................................................................... 29

    Lecture 5: Energy flow basics ............................................................................................................... 33

    Lecture 5 Supplement .......................................................................................................................... 37

    Lecture 6: Mass balances .................................................................................................................... 39

    Lecture 6 Supplement .......................................................................................................................... 45

    Lecture 7: Goal definition ..................................................................................................................... 48

    Lecture 8: Scope definition: functional units ....................................................................................... 52

    Lecture 8 Supplement .......................................................................................................................... 57

    Lecture 9: Scope definition: initial system boundaries ....................................................................... 59

    Lecture 10: Scope definition: requirements for data and data quality ................................................ 67

    Lecture 11: Scope definition: review and reporting ............................................................................. 73

    Lecture 12: Life cycle inventories: the basics ...................................................................................... 77

    Lecture 13: Life cycle inventories: mass flows and cut off criteria ..................................................... 82

    Lecture 14: Life cycle inventories: data estimation .............................................................................. 87

    Lecture 15: Life cycle inventories: multi-functionality ........................................................................ 92

    Lecture 16: Life cycle inventories: system expansion ....................................................................... 100

    Lecture 17: Life cycle inventories: data quality assessment ............................................................. 109

    Lecture 18: Life cycle inventories: Input-output (IO) methods ......................................................... 115

    Lecture 19: Life cycle inventories: EIO-LCA ....................................................................................... 121

    Lecture 20: Life cycle inventories: IO uses and limitations ................................................................ 127

    Lecture 21: Life-cycle impact assessment: the basics ....................................................................... 131

    Lecture 22: Life-cycle impact assessment: how it works .................................................................. 136

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    Lecture 23: Life-cycle impact assessment: impact categories ........................................................... 142

    Lecture 24: Interpretation: the basics ............................................................................................... 147

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    About these lecture notes There are many useful resources for learning the life-cycle assessment (LCA) methodology, including

    books, websites, case studies, publicly-available lecture materials, and LCA standards and

    guidebooks. Rather than choose one particular resource as the assigned reading, the course staff

    has prepared this compendium of lecture notes, which will serve as your primary reference for this

    course. These notes make use of elements of key online LCA resources that are available to

    students, and refer you to them where appropriate for additional information on different LCA

    topics. Additional readings will be assigned or suggested throughout our MOOC as part of the

    homework assignments, through the discussion forums, and when discussing specific LCA case

    studies.

    Each chapter relates to a single video lecture. The first section in each chapter contains a full

    transcript of the video lecture. These transcripts will allow you to read along with the lectures as

    you watch them, to write down comments at different points in a lecture, and to refer to the lecture

    content when you are offline.

    In many chapters, a second section has been provided, which contains additional notes that expand

    upon points made within the lecture and refer you to other LCA resources as appropriate. Because

    Coursera video lectures are inherently short, weve made use of the additional notes sections to

    provide you with supporting information that couldnt be included in the video lectures due to time

    constraints. Weve also added additional notes to further discuss topics that proved particularly

    interesting or challenging in past offerings of the MOOC. Within the transcript section, youll see

    blue arrows in the left hand margin that look like this:

    This symbol indicates that additional notes have been provided. Each additional note has been

    assigned a number, which also appears in the blue arrow symbol (in our example above, this

    number is 1.1). The numbered blue arrows will allow you to easily jump back and forth between the

    transcript and the additional information that is relevant to a particular topic.

    Lecture notes will be released on a week-by-week basis.

    We hope these lecture notes can serve as a basic, useful reference for you in your learning

    experience. Suggestions for improving or expanding these lecture notes for future offerings of this

    course are heartily welcomed. We hope you enjoy our journey together learning about and applying

    the LCA methodology. Lets get started!

    1.1

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    Lecture 1: The life-cycle perspective and course goals Transcript

    Hello, and welcome to How Green is that Product? An Introduction to Life Cycle Assessment. Im

    Eric Masanet, and Ill be your instructor for this course. I hope youve been looking forward to this

    as much as I have.

    This course will provide you with a basic working knowledge of life cycle assessment, or LCA for

    short. Now, you wont become a certified LCA practitioner in only nine weeks. However, you will

    learn how to construct LCA studies that provide transparent results, to build basic LCA models in

    spreadsheets, and to collect, analyze, and interpret environmental data in a structured manner for

    better decisions.

    But perhaps most importantly, youll learn that -- whatever the product -- everything has

    environmental impacts and that understanding these impacts requires sound data and thorough

    analysis. If you stick with me, youll be equipped with the basic skills to conduct such analyses and

    begin answering environmental questions of your own.

    So what exactly is LCA? LCA is a method to assess the environmental impacts of a product, process,

    or service that involves four major steps:

    1. Determine the goals and scope of the LCA;

    2. Compile an inventory of energy and mass

    inputs and outputs across all relevant life

    cycle stages;

    3. Evaluate relevant environmental impacts

    associated with the life-cycle inputs and

    releases; and

    4. Interpret the results to lead to a more

    informed decision.

    Lets first discuss what is meant by life cycle stages using this plastic bag as an example. In this

    course, well refer to five distinct stages of the product life cycle:

    1. Raw materials acquisition, which includes processes related to raw materials extraction and

    refining. For our plastic bag, which is made of a plastic called high-density polyethylene or

    HDPE for short, raw materials acquisition would include extracting and processing natural

    gas and transporting it to a chemicals plant.

    1.1

    1.2

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    2. Manufacturing, which includes processes that convert raw materials to finished products.

    In our case, plastic bags are manufactured by producing plastic pellets, melting them into a

    film, and forming the bags.

    3. Distribution, which includes transporting and stocking products for consumption. For

    example, our plastic bag will be shipped from the manufacturer to a grocer.

    4. Use/reuse, which is the stage where products perform a useful service to the consumer. In

    our case, the plastic bag will carry our groceries home. Some consumers might also reuse

    the bag for additional shopping trips or as a garbage can liner, which is why we often include

    reuse in the use phase as well.

    5. Stage 5 is the end of life stage, where products enter the waste management system.

    Depending on local waste management practices, the plastic bag might be recycled,

    landfilled, or incinerated to generate energy.

    So what is meant by relevant impacts? As youll learn in this course, an environmental impact is a

    consequence associated with inputs and outputs of energy and mass across the product life cycle.

    For example, the combustion of diesel fuel in the trucks that transport plastic bags to the grocer

    releases carbon dioxide, which leads to global warming. When conducting an LCA, we strive to

    include all non-negligible impacts so that informed decisions can be made and any tradeoffs

    between impacts are made explicit.

    Consider again this plastic bag. Many jurisdictions have banned plastic

    bags at grocery stores in an effort to reduce litter. However, several

    LCA studies have shown that if consumers shift to paper bags, more

    diesel trucking might be required. Why is that? Its because a paper

    bag takes up more space than a plastic bag, and therefore more trucks

    might be required to bring the same number bags to the grocer. So in

    this case, one tradeoff of a shift from plastic to paper grocery bags

    might be that plastic litter is reduced but diesel fuel use and emissions

    are increased.

    This case teaches us two important lessons. First, an LCA can reveal that, while we think were

    making a green choice, environmental impacts may shift based on the consumption choices we

    make. Thats why its important to consider all relevant impacts in an LCA; otherwise such shifts in

    impacts might be missed when were evaluating our options. Second, consideration of all life cycle

    stages allowed for identification of unintended consequences. That is, a reduction in plastic litter in

    the end of life stage might come at the cost of increased diesel fuel use in the distribution stage. If

    we just focused on non-biodegradable litter, surely paper bags would look greener than plastic. Its

    only by looking at all life cycle stages did we see that paper bags might make things worse in the

    distribution stage. So you see that even the simple case of plastic versus paper bags involves

    1.3

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    environmental tradeoffs. With proper application of the LCA method, however, these tradeoffs are

    made visible so we can make the most informed decisions.

    You may be wondering how LCA is used in the real world, or, more directly, how you might use LCA

    after completing this course. If youre an engineer, LCA can help you choose materials and design

    features that lead to greener products and technologies. If youre a policy maker, LCA can help you

    design public policies and incentives that improve sustainability without simply shifting

    environmental problems from one type of impact to another. If youre a consumer, LCA can arm you

    with data and results that guide you to greener purchasing decisions. And no matter what you do,

    LCA can give you a healthy degree of skepticism of the environmental claims that are so often made

    without hard data and through analysis to back them up.

    Lets wrap up with an overview of what you can expect. Each lecture will

    introduce a new concept, which will be reinforced through online quizzes,

    homework, and the course notes. I believe LCA is best learned by

    jumping in hands on, so in this course youll build an LCA model of a

    simple product that you should all be familiar with a bottled soft drink.

    No special LCA software packages will be required; all that is needed is a

    spreadsheet.

    Each week youll be developing a new section of the model that relates to

    that weeks lecture material, so by the end of the course youll have built

    a complete bottled soda LCA. While the product is fairly simple, by

    building the model across all life cycle stages and impacts, youll acquire the skills and perspectives

    that should allow you to move on to more complex products after you complete this course.

    Lastly, well also occasionally offer separate videos describing real-world LCA studies that highlight

    key material, so you can easily see how the theory relates to practice in real time.

    Im looking forward to this experience together. See you next time!

    Additional notes

    Correction: In the lecture video, I say Compile an inventory of energy and material inputs and

    environmental outputs across all relevant life cycle stages when I really should have said Compile

    an inventory of energy and mass inputs and outputs across all relevant life cycle stages. The goal of

    LCA is to include all relevant mass flows, whether they are materials, resources (such as water or

    biomass), pollutants to the environment, or products to society.

    Correction: As youll see in Homework 1, natural gas must be extracted and processed before it can

    be used in industrial systems. Processing is aimed at improving natural gas quality by removing

    impurities. In the lecture video, I say raw materials acquisition would include extracting natural

    gas and transporting it to a chemicals plant when I really should have said raw materials

    1.4

    1.1

    1.2

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    acquisition would include extracting and processing natural gas and transporting it to a chemicals

    plant.

    Correction: In the lecture video, I say an environmental impact is an adverse consequence

    associated with inputs of resources and outputs of pollutants across the product life cycle when I

    really should have said an environmental impact is a consequence associated with inputs and

    outputs of energy and mass across the product life cycle. In reality, not all impacts arising from life-

    cycle systems are negative. For example, a biomass system may sequester carbon dioxide from the

    air and a remediation technology may remove hazardous pollutants from soil to make it safe again.

    By quantifying all flows of mass and energy across a life-cycle system (and not just resource and

    pollutant flows), LCA enables us to explore both adverse and positive impacts associated with these

    flows. While well focus exclusively on adverse impacts in this course, it is helpful to keep in mind

    that LCA can just as easily quantify positive impacts.

    Starting in week 3, youll begin building your very own LCA model of a bottled soft drink packaged in

    plastic. See the Course Project section of the course website for more details. (The Course

    Project section can be accessed by clicking on Start Here! or Course Information in the left

    hand navigation pane on the course website.) Note also that I say bottle of soda in the lecture

    video, which is a term used commonly in North America to refer to bottled soft drink.

    1.3

    1.4

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    Lecture 1 Supplement Transcript

    Welcome to our first lecture video supplement. Supplements such as this one have been added to

    improve the course content and to provide additional discussions and examples to help you better

    understand the topics covered in our core lecture videos.

    In this first supplement, Id like to give you a better idea of what to expect in this course as well as

    some tips for success based on past course offerings.

    First, I highly encourage you to review all of the material provided on the Start Here! section of

    the website, which includes important information on policies, our course schedule, and further

    details on the project.

    Lets take a look at the course schedule, which lists the topics well cover in this course. The first

    two weeks of this course will cover core skills that are necessary for sound LCA, such as constructing

    unit process inventories, conducting energy and mass balances, and understanding data

    conventions. These are the essential building blocks of an LCA. In Week 3, well begin applying

    these building blocks to learn the LCA methodology and to start constructing our very own LCA

    models.

    For more information on the LCA models, lets take a look at the Project section of the website,

    which describes the scope and intent of the course project. Youll be exposed to two different LCA

    models, both of which will be developed in spreadsheets.

    The first is an LCA model for a plastic grocery bag that has been developed by the course staff. The

    spreadsheet consists of different tabs that contain the various elements of the LCA model, which

    we'll reveal in week by week fashion as we learn each step of the LCA methodology. Think of our

    plastic bag LCA model as an example of how your bottled soft drink LCA model should be

    constructed and how it should function, and refer to it often for inspiration and guidance.

    The second is the LCA model for a bottled soft drink, which youll be developing yourself. Starting

    in Week 3, youll be given tasks to construct your model based on recent lecture topics.

    Furthermore, some of the homework assignments will contain exercises that help you build specific

    portions of your model. By following the development of our plastic bag LCA model, and by

    completing the homework and modeling tasks to construct your own bottled soft drink LCA model,

    youll gain valuable hands on experience. The course staff will also post regular solutions for the

    bottled soft drink model, which you can use to check the accuracy of your spreadsheet.

    Id also like to draw your attention to the discussion forums. If youve taken Coursera courses in the

    past, youll know that the discussion forums can be a great way to enhance your learning

    experience, but that they can also become unwieldy to navigate over time. To minimize forum

    fatigue, weve established specific sub-forums for different types of posts. For example, there is an

    Assignments sub-forum that you can use for posts related to specific homework assignments.

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    There is also a Lectures sub-form for posts related to the lectures each week. Please review the

    available sub-forums and be sure to choose the most logical sub-forum first before you make a post.

    If we all do this, the discussion forums should be much more useful and manageable for everyone.

    Youll also notice that Ill be suggesting discussion topics each week. These questions should be fun

    to explore together, and will help us all think about how LCA relates to our own lives and the

    sustainability problems wed like to solve. While participation isnt mandatory, I highly encourage

    you to join in or review the posts whenever you can. The topics have been selected from some of

    the most interesting and thought-provoking discussions in past offerings, so Im sure youll enjoy

    them.

    Finally, here are some quick tips for getting the most out of this course and earning a high grade:

    First, if you need to improve your spreadsheet skills, please use the first two weeks of this course to

    do so. Weve provided a specific discussion sub-forum that students can use to share spreadsheet

    tips and tricks. Once we introduce the LCA models in Week 3, you may find it difficult to keep up if

    youre not comfortable with spreadsheets.

    Second, while the first two weeks of this course are somewhat basic, the level of difficulty and

    required effort will increase in Weeks 3 9 when we move into the LCA method and modeling.

    Therefore, you should plan for a greater time commitment in the last 7 weeks of the course.

    Third, please take full advantage of the discussion forums for seeking out help and providing help to

    others. In past offerings, many questions related to homework assignments, project tasks, and LCA

    concepts were collectively answered by students through ongoing discussion. And you may find

    that assisting others deepens your own understanding of the course material.

    Fourth, while I encourage students to exchange ideas, please try to complete the assignments and

    project tasks on your own before seeking out answers online. Learning through trial and error is

    important for any course, and especially for the LCA methodology given its many details and

    nuances.

    Fifth, and finally, try to review some of the additional resources that are indicated in the lecture

    notes. This course only covers basic LCA concepts, but the additional resources we mention provide

    a wealth of information that can bring you closer to LCA proficiency if you have the time to review

    them.

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    Lecture 2: Understanding unit processes Transcript

    Welcome back! Today well begin learning about the data structure of an LCA, starting with LCAs

    most fundamental building block: the unit process model. But first lets quickly review what we

    learned yesterday.

    The product life cycle can be divided into five major stages: raw materials acquisition,

    manufacturing, distribution, use, and end of life. In our plastic bag example, we learned that raw

    materials acquisition covers the extraction, processing, and transportation of natural gas, which is

    then converted into ethylene. Ethylene is converted into HDPE and formed into a bag in the

    manufacturing stage. Next, the bag is distributed to retail stores, where it is filled with groceries to

    transport food home during the use stage. Lastly, at the end of life stage, the bag is either recycled,

    landfilled, or incinerated to generate energy.

    We also learned that a key step in all LCAs is to compile an inventory of energy and mass inputs and

    outputs across all relevant life cycle stages. So how do we compile such inventories? We do so by

    modeling the product life cycle as a series of unit processes. The ISO 14040 standard for LCA

    defines a unit process as the smallest portion of a product system for which data are collected

    when performing a life-cycle assessment.

    This is a picture of a generic unit process. On the left we have inputs of energy and mass required to

    generate a useful product output. On the right we have the outputs of environmental emissions

    and co-products that are associated with the process, along with the product output itself. From

    now on, well refer to the inputs and outputs associated with a unit process as the unit process

    inventory, which is a term commonly used by LCA practitioners.

    2.1

    2.2

    2.4

    2.3

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    To visualize how we use unit processes, lets look more closely at the manufacturing stage of our

    plastic bag. The first step is to convert processed natural gas into ethylene, which well represent by

    this first unit process model.

    The second step is to convert ethylene into HDPE pellets, which well represent with this second unit

    process.

    The third step is to melt the HDPE pellets, extrude a film, and form the bags in the bag production

    process.

    2.5

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    As youve probably guessed, to construct a complete LCA model for the plastic bag, wed need to

    develop and apply unit process models to capture all unit processes at each life cycle stage. We can

    then sum all the unit process inventories to quantify the total environmental footprint of the bag life

    cycle. Youll learn how to do this later; for now, you may be asking yourself how such unit process

    inventories and life-cycle models can be developed without detailed engineering knowledge.

    Fortunately, we have we have databases and literature sources to help us in this regard.

    For example, a unit process inventory I obtained from the literature for converting ethylene to HDPE

    pellets looks like this. If this level of detail seems a bit daunting, dont worry youll learn how to

    work confidently with unit process inventory data in this course.

    Fortunately, the LCA community has adopted a number of conventions for organizing unit process

    inventories to make our lives easier. These conventions help ensure that inventories are intuitive

    and use the same data structure for easy transfer between researchers and databases. So while the

    unit process inventory for HDPE pellets may look complicated, thanks to this structured organization

    of data it is actually simpler than it looks.

    2.6

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    First, many unit process inventories refer to inputs and outputs as flows or exchanges. In this

    course, well use the word flows. Unit process inventories are essentially comprised of flow

    information listed in rows.

    In many LCI databases, flows are further characterized as flows to or from nature or to or from the

    technosphere. In this course, well adopt this convention and organize our inventories into the

    following four types of flows:

    1. Inputs from nature,

    2. Inputs from the technosphere,

    3. Outputs to nature, and

    4. Outputs to the technosphere

    Inputs from nature are probably pretty obvious: they include flows such as crude oil extracted from

    the ground or corn harvested from a field. Conversely, outputs to nature include pollutants and

    wastes that are released back into the environment. Inputs from and outputs to the technosphere

    refer to any flow of energy or mass that originates from a man-made process. For example, diesel

    fuel is produced from crude oil in a petroleum refinery, but we dont find diesel fuel occurring

    naturally in the environment.

    For our plastic bag, the extraction of natural gas describes a flow from nature. After extraction,

    natural gas must be processed to remove impurities. In the next unit process, that processed

    natural gas is converted into ethylene. Here, because the natural gas came from a pipe and not the

    ground, it is considered an input from the technosphere. Because ethylene is an intermediate

    product that is used by other unit processes, it is considered an output to the technosphere.

    2.7

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    Why do we need to distinguish between flows to and from nature and flows to and from the

    technosphere? Besides helping us better visualize the origins and destinations of flows in our

    inventory, identifying flows to and from nature allows us to quantify environmental impacts in the

    life-cycle impact assessment step of an LCA. Well learn more about impact assessment later in the

    course. For now, lets get used to organizing our unit process inventories in this way.

    Lastly, well use SI units to describe all flows in our unit process inventories in this course. For

    example, mass will be expressed in grams, energy in joules, and volume in liters. Some of you may

    wish to review the SI system before proceeding with this course; further readings are provided in

    this weeks course notes.

    Additional notes

    Correction: Here weve added in the processing step that was omitted in the lecture video. See

    Note 1.2.

    Correction: Here again I should have referred to energy and mass inputs and outputs instead of

    energy and materials inputs and environmental releases. See Note 1.1.

    The ISO 14040 series of standards are a set of best practice rules and guidelines for conducting

    LCA that have been developed and revised by the international LCA expert community since the

    1990s. Well be referring to these standards often throughout the course. Well use them to discuss

    the step by step nature of an LCA and to reinforce best practices. Unfortunately, the actual

    standards documents are not freely available to the public. However, youll get a basic

    understanding of these standards through our class materials and through the additional readings

    well suggest and assign. There is no need to purchase the standards to benefit from the content of

    this course. For those who would like to learn more about the formal standards, please visit the

    International Organization for Standardization (ISO) website at:

    http://www.iso.org/iso/home/store/catalogue_tc/catalogue_tc_browse.htm?commid=54854

    Correction: Here weve changed materials and energy to the more general and correct energy

    and mass. See Note 1.1.

    For clarity, weve specified that it is processed natural gas that is converted into ethylene.

    Processed natural as is a flow from the technosphere. This change was necessary to reduce

    confusion in past course offerings as to whether natural gas from nature or natural gas from the

    technosphere is used in ethylene production. See the Lecture 2 supplement video for more

    information.

    2.8

    2.1

    2.2

    2.3

    2.4

    2.5

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    To give you a sense of the detail contained in a typical life-cycle inventory (LCI), and the

    documentation that explains and supports such inventories, take a peek at the following report.

    Youll use some of these data in this course to build you spreadsheet LCA model of a bottled soft

    drink. There is no need to carefully read this report now, or to understand its contents. But looking

    it over will give you an idea of the types of information sources that we rely on when constructing

    LCA models.

    Franklin Associates (2009). Life Cycle Inventory of Three Single-Serving Soft Drink Containers:

    Revised Peer Reviewed Final Report. Prepared for the PET Resin Association. Eastern

    Research Group. Prairie Village, KS. http://www.container-recycling.org/assets/pdfs/LCA-

    SodaContainers2009.pdf

    Similar to the reasons for Note 2.5, here weve added After extraction, natural gas must be

    processed to remove impurities. In the next unit process, that processed natural gas is converted

    into ethylene. See the Lecture 2 supplement video for more information.

    There are many useful resources online for reviewing conversions from Imperial and US Customary

    units into International System (SI) units. While well use SI units in this course, you are likely to

    encounter data sources in your project and in your LCA careers that are expressed in Imperial

    and US Customary units. Here are some conversion resources that the course staff recommends.

    International System of Units from NIST. Essentials of SI units, background, and

    bibliography. http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/

    A concise summary of the International System of Units from BIPM.

    http://www.bipm.org/utils/common/pdf/si_summary_en.pdf

    OnlineConversion.com Convert just about anything to anything else.

    http://www.onlineconversion.com/

    2.6

    2.8

    2.7

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    Lecture 2 Supplement Transcript

    To ensure that you understand the concept of a unit process and the distinctions between inputs

    from nature, inputs from the technosphere, outputs to nature, and outputs to the technosphere,

    lets step through the plastic grocery bag example in a bit more detail. Furthermore, lets try

    working backwards in the life cycle so that the different types of flows are clear.

    Lets first consider the factory that makes plastic grocery bags. The production of plastic bags

    involves melting HDPE pellets, extruding the melted plastic into a film, and cutting the film into the

    shape of a bag. For simplicity, well include these steps in one unit process that well label HDPE

    Bag Manufacturing. The output of this unit process is an HDPE grocery bag. Since this bag will be

    shipped to a grocer for use by consumers, well label this flow as an output to the technosphere.

    To manufacture the plastic bag, the bag factory requires inputs of HDPE pellets, which are a man-

    made product. Therefore, well label this flow as an input from the technosphere. Of course, there

    are many other flows associated with the bag factory, such as inputs of energy to power processing

    equipment and outputs of mass, including emissions of air and water pollutants. For now, well

    ignore these flows to keep things simple.

    The production of HDPE pellets occurs at a chemical factory, which converts ethyleneanother

    man-made productinto HDPE resin. Lets label this unit process as HDPE Resin Manufacturing,

    and denote the flow of ethylene into the factory as an input from the technosphere.

    Ethylene is manufactured from processed natural gas at an olefins plant, which well label as

    Ethylene Manufacturing in our simple example. Remember that processed natural gas does not

    come directly from nature; rather, it is made by removing impurities from raw natural gas. Hence,

    well label this flow as an input from the technosphere.

    To produce processed natural gas, another unit process is required that well call Natural Gas

    Processing. This unit process requires extracted natural gas, which is yet another technosphere

    product that we get as an output from natural gas drilling operations.

    Finally, lets label the natural gas drilling unit process as Natural Gas Extraction. The input to this

    unit process is natural gas from the ground, which is an input from nature. Observing the entire

    system, its now clear that to manufacture the HDPE grocery bag, a series of different unit processes

    are required. These unit processes are linked by technosphere flows that can eventually be traced

    back to an original exchange with nature.

    Moving forward, youll be developing more detailed inventories of energy and mass flows across

    unit process systems. For example, we could further include the input of processed natural gas to

    be combusted for heat in HDPE resin manufacturing as well as the smokestack emissions of carbon

    dioxide and other air pollutants that arise from natural gas combustion. Here, emissions of carbon

    dioxide would be labeled as a flow to nature.

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    As youll come to learn in future lectures, specifying and tracking types of flows in unit process

    systems is critical from an accounting perspective, because the environmental impacts of a system

    are related to its flows to and from nature. In our case, you can probably imagine that the sources

    of impact in our system so far are related to the resources we extract from the ground and to the

    pollutants we reject into the air.

    Youll get more practice with labeling flows in Homework 1.

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    Lecture 3: Constructing unit process inventories: Part 1 Transcript

    Welcome back. In todays lecture, well dive deeper into how unit process inventories are

    structured for ease of interpretation and ease of transfer between researchers and databases. Last

    time I introduced the four types of flows well use in our inventories:

    1. Inputs from nature,

    2. Inputs from the technosphere,

    3. Outputs to nature, and

    4. Outputs to the technosphere

    Lets take a closer look at the complete unit process inventory for converting ethylene to HDPE

    pellets. Ive created this inventory in a spreadsheet in the same way that youll be creating unit

    process inventories in your spreadsheets. As we discussed last time, flow data appear in rows of the

    inventory table, and they are organized into our four types of flows. In this course, the first column

    in the inventory will always contain the flow type, starting with inputs from nature, followed by

    outputs to nature, inputs from the technosphere, and outputs to the technosphere.

    The second column will always contain the name of the flow, which, by convention, uses standard

    names for products (e.g., diesel fuel), pollutants (e.g., carbon dioxide), and resources (e.g., water).

    In many cases, the name of the flow will be taken directly from the LCI database from which we get

    the flow data. It is critically important to use standard flow names and to use them consistently so

    we can link up unit process inventories correctly when creating our LCA model.

    3.1

    3.2

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    The third column contains additional information on the origins and destinations of flows to and

    from nature, which well refer to in this course as the flow category. Inputs from nature will

    always be denoted as resources in the category column, while outputs to nature will be denoted

    by the medium to which they are released. There are three media well denote: air, water, and land.

    The fourth column is reserved for subcategories of the third column. For example, the

    subcategories for outputs to air include emissions to areas with low population density and

    emissions to areas with high population density. And the subcategories for resources include

    resources extracted from in the ground (like coal), from water (like drinking water), or from the

    biosphere (like wood). In this course, well use a standard set of subcategories to describe inventory

    flows. Ive provided the list of subcategories well use in the lecture notes because there are too

    many to mention here.

    Why do we need information on flow categories and subcategories? The main reason is that this

    information helps us better quantify the environmental impacts caused by flows to and from nature

    in the life-cycle impact assessment step of an LCA. For example, you might easily imagine that a

    pollutant emitted in a high population density area will have a higher human health impact than if it

    were emitted in a low population density area where there are fewer persons exposed. Well learn

    more about impact assessment later in the course.

    I also want to mention that in many LCI databases, flows to and from nature are referred to as

    elementary flows. So you arent confused by this, moving forward well also use this label for our

    flow types in unit process inventories.

    By convention, well always use the category product for flows to and from the technosphere.

    This makes sense when we consider that once a resource enters the technosphere, it is converted

    into different forms of products for further use by industry and society.

    The fifth column in our inventory table will always contain a numerical value and our sixth column

    will always contain the unit in which that value is expressed. Where do these values come from?

    Typically through some combination of direct measurement, engineering estimation, or literature

    sourcing. Knowing where the data come from and how to determine their quality is a critical step in

    any credible LCA, and one which well discuss later in this course. For now, just assume that all data

    in our inventory come from reliable sources.

    The numerical value expresses the amount of each flow that corresponds to the units of product

    output listed in the inventory. For example, our product output is one kg of HDPE pellets, and the

    emissions of CO2 to air associated with the production of one kg of HDPE pellets is 100 g CO2.

    Here the product output is expressed in units of mass; however, the product output in a unit process

    inventory can be expressed in many different units depending on what goods or services are

    provided. The unit process of pellet production logically has product outputs expressed in units of

    kg, which corresponds to physical production. However, a unit process for a diesel freight truck

    might have product output expressed in units of kilogram-kilometers, which corresponds to the

    3.3

    3.4

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    useful service provided by trucking. Or a unit process for electricity production might specify kWh of

    electricity produced, which is the useful output of that process. Youll get exposed to all of these

    types of outputs and more moving forward.

    Lastly, our simple example inventory focused on single unit process, but youll often encounter unit

    process inventories that combine several unit processes into one aggregated inventory. For

    example, rather than finding every unit process step in the manufacture of the bag which would

    include natural gas extraction, transportation, conversion to pellets, and bag forming you might

    just find a single inventory for all of these processing steps combined. This aggregated inventory

    would contain the sum of all included unit process flows to and from nature.

    Aggregated inventories are quite common in practice, because they can simplify a complex chain of

    processes for general use. Aggregated inventories also protect private entities who may not want to

    release detailed unit process data on each step in their production chain. The downside is that one

    loses visibility on which of the aggregated processes might be hot spots and often the ability to

    recreate the inventory using process-level knowledge.

    How can you tell if you have an aggregated inventory? Good databases will tell you this in their

    inventory documentation. Youll notice terms like cradle to gate, which refers to flows from

    nature to a certain point in the technosphere, or gate to gate, which refers to flows between

    points in the technosphere. All unit processes included in the aggregated inventory should be listed

    explicitly.

    Additional notes

    When you gain access to the spreadsheet LCA models in Week 3, the structure and contents of this

    unit process inventory will make more sense. For now, just concentrate on following the logic for

    each column, and how that information will be useful when you link together many different unit

    process inventories to construct a systems model.

    In the models well use in the current offering of this course, the order of flows has been updated as

    follows In this course, the first column in the inventory will always contain the flow type, starting

    with inputs from nature, followed by outputs to nature, inputs from the technosphere, and outputs

    to the technosphere. The updated order is reflected in the spreadsheet figure as well.

    In our plastic bag and bottled soft drink LCA models, well use a simplified set of categories and

    subcategories for all flows. As discussed in the lecture video, well adopt the convention of using

    the category Product for all flows to and from the technosphere. Product flows will not be further

    divided into subcategories.

    Inputs from and outputs to nature that is, elementary flows will be labeled using the following

    simplified set of categories and subcategories in our inventories.

    3.1

    3.2

    3.3

    3.5

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    Elementary flow type Category Subcategory

    Inputs from nature Resource Biotic (from biosphere)

    In air

    In ground

    In water

    Outputs to nature Air High population density

    Low population density

    Land Unspecified

    Water Unspecified

    There are several important caveats to our simplified selection of elementary flow categories and

    subcategories.

    First, because this is a basic introductory course, the course staff has chosen to keep our flow

    conventions simple. Once you get in the habit of labeling flow categories and subcategories at a

    basic level, youll be well equipped to use more detailed protocols for labeling of flow categories and

    subcategories in the future. To get an idea of the level of detail that many LCA practitioners use

    when conducting LCAs and working with LCA databases, take a look at the following reports:

    Overview and methodology: Data quality guideline for the ecoinvent database version 3

    (2013), Weidema B P, Bauer C, Hischier R, Mutel C, Nemecek T, Reinhard J, Vadenbo CO,

    and Wernet G.

    http://www.ecoinvent.org/fileadmin/documents/en/Data_Quality_Guidelines/01_DataQual

    ityGuideline_v3_Final.pdf

    The ecoinvent database is used widely by LCA practitioners and within various LCA software

    packages. Take a look at Table 9.1, page 63, which lists the compartments and sub-

    compartments (i.e., categories and subcategories) used for elementary exchanges (i.e.,

    flows) in the ecoinvent database. Youll notice that many more subcategories are available

    for defining flows with greater precision in practice.

    U.S. LCI Database Project Users Guide, National Renewable Energy Laboratory (2004).

    http://www.nrel.gov/lci/pdfs/users_guide.pdf.

    The U.S. LCI data contains publicly-available life-cycle inventory (LCI) data that are reported

    using a standardized unit process inventory structure. Well make use of some of the data

    from the U.S. LCI database in this course. Take a look at the table on page 16. Youll notice

    many categories and subcategories that are similar to those in the ecoinvent database, but

    also some differences. Again, the subcategories listed allow for greater precision when

    documenting flows.

    Second, even though the categories and subcategories included in many LCA databases can be quite

    detailed, in practice many LCI data sources do not include such detail in their reporting. For

    example, one may find that pollutant outputs to water are reported, but that this flow is not further

    specified as an output to a lake, ocean, or river. Thus, in many LCI data sources, the most common

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    subcategory youll encounter is unspecified. The publicly-available data sources well use in our

    course projects do not contain such detailed specification of subcategories, either. This is another

    reason well keep our labeling of flow categories and subcategories simple in this course!

    Third, as discussed in the lecture video, the primary benefit of identifying categories and

    subcategories for elementary flows is that it can enable more sophisticated estimation of life-cycle

    impacts. In your course project, the labeling of air emission flows with the subcategories high

    population density and low population density can enable the estimation of human health

    impacts to both types of demographic areas. Well discuss impact analysis later in this course.

    In the spreadsheet models, and throughout this course, numbers will be expressed using the U.S.

    numeric convention where commas separate thousands and the dot (or decimal point) is the

    decimal separator. For example, the number one thousand two hundred and one-tenth is written

    1,200.1 in the US numeric convention. However, when working with spreadsheets in this course,

    you can change the numeric format in which data are displayed in your spreadsheet software to

    match your local numeric convention.

    Weve added in the term to and from nature here, because the process of aggregation eliminates

    intermediate flows to and from the technosphere in the system. See the Lecture 3 supplement video

    for a simple example of unit process inventory aggregation.

    3.4

    3.5

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    Lecture 3 Supplement Transcript

    In this video supplement, well use the simplified system of unit processes for HDPE grocery bags

    that we discussed earlier. Below the figure Ive added in an inventory table that contains a

    simplified list of flows for each unit process. In this example, well only track a few flows to illustrate

    how inventory aggregation works. However, youll practice aggregating much more complicated

    inventories later in this course.

    Lets start with the unit process inventory for HDPE Bag Manufacturing. In this simplified inventory,

    its only input is 1.02 kilograms (kg) of HDPE pellets and its only outputs are 1 kg of HDPE grocery

    bags and 0.5 kg of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions to air. By convention, the flows of HDPE pellets

    and HDPE grocery bags are labeled as product flows from and to the technosphere, respectively.

    Also by convention, the flow of CO2 is labeled as a flow to nature, or elementary flow, and to air.

    Now lets take a closer look at the Natural Gas Extraction process. Its only input is 1.08 kg of in-

    ground natural gas, which is a resource flow from nature. Its only outputs are 1.05 kg of extracted

    natural gas and 0.02 kg of CO2 emissions to air. Youll notice that the next unit process, Natural Gas

    Processing, requires 1.05 kg of extracted natural gas as a product input. If you look carefully at the

    rest of the unit process inventories, youll also notice that the product mass output of each unit

    process matches exactly the product mass input that is required by the next unit process.

    This means that my unit process inventory data have all been properly scaled to produce the mass

    flows necessary to ultimately manufacture 1 kg of HDPE grocery bags. Youll learn how to scale unit

    process inventories later in this course. For now, you just need to understand that since the product

    mass flows have been balanced across all unit processes, we can simply add up the flows of CO2 to

    arrive at a total CO2 emissions footprint for the system.

    In this example, to ultimately produce 1 kg of HDPE grocery bags, the unit processes in the system

    will collectively emit 2.02 total kg of CO2 to the air. One can also scan the inventory data to

    determine which unit processes account for the greatest share of CO2 emissions; namely, HDPE Bag

    Manufacturing, HDPE Resin Manufacturing, and Ethylene Manufacturing.

    In a similar fashion, I could also add up all resource inputs from nature in the system, which, in this

    case, would amount to 1.08 kg of in-ground natural gas required to ultimately produce 1 kg of HDPE

    grocery bags.

    In fact, using these totals I could create a single inventory for the entire system, which would just

    contain the inputs from nature, the outputs to nature, and the product output of the system. Such

    an inventory is known as an aggregated unit process inventory, because it represents the sum totals

    of flows to and from nature associated with all unit processes within its system boundaries. These

    flows are expressed relative to the mass quantity of the final product output from the system, in our

    case, 1 kg of HDPE grocery bags.

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    Another way to think of aggregation is that Ive drawn a boundary around the entire system and Ive

    only counted the flows that cross this boundary in my aggregated inventory; namely, flows from and

    to nature and flows of the final product to the technosphere. All of the intermediate product flows

    in the system do not cross this boundary, and are therefore not counted. This makes sense when

    you observe that all of these flows will simply cancel out; for example, the ethylene output from the

    Ethylene Manufacturing unit process will subsequently be consumed as a product input by the HDPE

    Resin Manufacturing unit process.

    As you gain more practice with LCA, youll notice that many data sources contain aggregated unit

    process inventories. Aggregation can be done as a matter of convenience, since it can be quite time

    consuming to work with inventories for all intermediate unit processes in a product system, even for

    simple products. Aggregation is also often done for confidentiality reasons, so that data on

    individual factories or processing steps within a system are not revealed to the public. For example,

    assume that you have obtained only the aggregated inventory for 1 kg of HDPE grocery bags. While

    you would know the total CO2 emissions to air from the cradle to gate system, you would have no

    way of identifying HDPE Bag Manufacturing, HDPE Resin Manufacturing, and Ethylene

    Manufacturing as the largest contributors to this CO2 footprint.

    In our spreadsheet models for our plastic bag and bottled soft drink, well make use of aggregated

    inventories as a matter of practicality and convenience. However, well be sure to carefully

    document the system boundaries associated with the aggregated inventories we use, so that we and

    others can understand which intermediate unit processes have been included therein.

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    Lecture 4: Constructing unit process inventories: Part 2 Transcript

    In this course, well mostly be using data from available databases and literature sources that have

    already been neatly organized into structured unit process inventories. In practice, however, LCA

    analysts must often construct new unit process inventories by gathering data from various sources.

    Today well practice constructing our own unit process inventories to help you gain proficiency in

    data compilation and analysis. Well also learn an important convention for ensuring we can scale

    our unit process inventories for use in different LCA models.

    Lets suppose we are conducting an LCA of a residential hot water heater that is fueled by natural

    gas. In todays example, well be constructing the unit process inventory for the use stage of the

    water heater, which refers to its operation. Ive gathered some data on the average natural gas

    consumption and hot water generation of US residential hot water heaters from the U.S.

    Department of Energy and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

    The average U.S. residential hot water heater consumes 27 gigajoules (GJ) of natural gas per

    year

    The average U.S. residential home uses 64,000 liters of hot water per year

    As you gain more experience with LCA, youll probably notice that there are typically more data

    available on the energy consumption of different processes and products than there are for other

    flows such as water pollutant releases and solid waste generation. The reason for this is quite

    simple: energy use is easy to track because it is something we pay for and monitor closely.

    Moreover, many regional governments track energy supplies and demands as part of energy policy

    planning. When we have energy data, it is often fairly easy to derive air emissions data as well

    based on combustion emission factors for various fuels, which are readily available.

    For example, since I know our residential water heater uses natural gas, it was fairly easy to find the

    following air pollutant emission factors for natural gas combustion in residential appliances. These

    came from the US Environmental Protection Agencys AP-42 emission factor reports:

    56,000 grams of carbon dioxide (CO2) per GJ of natural gas combusted

    44 grams of nitrogen oxides (NOx) per GJ of natural gas combusted

    19 grams of carbon monoxide (CO) per GJ of natural gas combusted

    4 grams of particulate matter (PM) per GJ of natural gas combusted

    The lesson here is that generating a unit process inventory that contains data on energy flows and

    energy-related air emissions flows is often possible when we cant find existing unit process

    inventories in LCI databases or literature sources. Unfortunately, data on flows of water pollutants,

    solid waste generation, and other elementary flows that are not related to a unit processs energy

    use are typically much harder to come by outside of LCA databases. The reason for this is also quite

    simple: these flows are harder to monitor and record in practice, and many firms do not release

    such data publicly.

    4.2

    4.1

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    So now I have all the data in hand to construct a simple unit process inventory for hot water heater

    operation. First, I determine the annual air emissions associated with the natural gas combustion by

    simple multiplication. When I have these data, I can now create a simple inventory using the

    structure weve discussed. Processed natural gas is a flow from the technosphere, and the air

    emissions are flows to nature. Lastly, my product is 64,000 liters of hot water.

    While this inventory is reasonable for the average U.S. home, is it highly useful in its current form?

    In other words, can I easily use it in other analyses, such as to analyze hot water generation for an

    LCA of a home dishwasher? For example, if a dishwasher uses less than 64,000 liters of hot water, I

    cant directly apply this inventory. Luckily, one useful convention for unit processes inventories with

    single product outputs is that such outputs are expressed as multipliers of 1, for example, 1 liter of

    hot water or 1 kWh of electricity.

    Having a multiplier of 1 in our denominator makes for much easier scaling of unit processes to

    different product output quantities. In the hot water example, lets say I want to calculate the CO2

    emissions associated with generating only 5,000 liters of hot water.

    First I divide all inputs and outputs in my unit process inventory by the product output to get flows

    per liter. Next, I recreate the inventory on this basis. Finally, I multiply by 5,000 liters to get the unit

    process inventory for producing 5,000 liters of hot water.

    Youve just learned the simple but powerful concept of using multiples of 1 as single product

    outputs to allow for easy scaling of unit process inventories in an LCA. Trust me, youll get much

    experience with scaling inventories since rarely do we analyze neat units of 1 product output in real-

    world systems.

    But what if you have more than one product output in the inventory, for example, a process with

    multiple co-products? The fact is we encounter unit process inventories with more than one

    product output quite often in LCA because many real-world plants manufacture more than one

    product at a time. Take for example the unit process inventory for 1 kg of general output from

    petroleum refining, a process that converts crude oil into multiple product outputs such as gasoline,

    diesel fuel, kerosene, and refinery gas.

    Because this inventory contains flow information for more than one product output, we need some

    way of assigning a portion of the inventory to each product flow. This process is so important in LCA

    that it has its own name: allocation. In this particular inventory, the author indicates that allocation

    of flows to individual product outputs can be based on the percent by mass indicated for each

    product output. However, as youll learn later in this course, there are other ways to allocate flows

    to multiple products in a system, such as assigning portions of the inventory to each product output

    based on their economic value. Each allocation method has potential drawbacks, which well

    discuss in future lectures. For now, just be aware that you will encounter inventories with multiple

    product outputs in practice, but that youll also learn to work with them effectively in this course.

    4.4

    4.6

    4.3

    4.5

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    Additional notes

    For those who may be interested in operational energy data for a wide variety of appliances and

    devices, check out the U.S. Building Energy Data Book, which is where we obtained the average

    natural gas use of U.S. residential hot water heaters (Table 2.1.17). Similar data are compiled by

    other countries and regions in the world, and can be helpful for estimating unit process inventories

    for the operation of common appliances and devices. In fact, well use U.S. Building Energy Data

    Book data for residential refrigerators to build our unit process inventory for the use phase (i.e.,

    beverage chilling) in our bottled soft drink LCA model. http://buildingsdatabook.eren.doe.gov/

    The U.S. Environmental Protection Agencys AP-42 compendium of emission factors is an exhaustive

    resource that can be used to estimate the air emissions from a wide range of combustion sources in

    the absence of primary or secondary inventory data on unit processes with combustion. In our

    residential hot water heater example, we used emission factors for natural gas combustion from

    Chapter 1: External Combustion Sources, Section 1.4. While we wont make further use of this data

    source in this course, you may find it useful in the future for estimating the air emissions associated

    with burning fuels in common processes across the residential, commercial, industrial, and transport

    sectors. http://www.epa.gov/ttnchie1/ap42/

    Correction: As in previous lectures, here I should have said Processed natural gas is a flow from the

    technosphere to be more precise. Also, note that the inventory youre seeing in the lecture

    video is very simplified, as it only contains a few flows to and from nature. Well work with a much

    more comprehensive list of flows to and from nature in the standard unit process inventory that

    well use in our plastic bag and bottled soft drink LCA model.

    To view an example of expressing product outputs in multiples of 1 in a unit process inventory for

    ease of scaling, take a look at the unit process inventory for corrugated product in the U.S. LCI

    database. Follow the steps below. Can you identify other unit process inventories that follow this

    convention?

    1. Go to http://www.nrel.gov/lci/

    2. Click on the Database link in the left side navigation box

    3. Select the checkbox for Paper manufacturing within the Category list

    4. Select the checkbox for Converted Paper Product Manufacturing

    5. Click on Corrugated Product, which appears in the list at right

    6. Click on the Exchanges tab, and look for the Corrugated Product output

    Correction: In the lecture video, I should have said for example, a process with multiple co-

    products instead of for example, a product with multiple co-products.

    4.1

    4.2

    4.4

    4.5

    4.3

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    Check out these inventory data for yourself in the U.S. LCI database, and note how many flow data

    are provided. Petroleum refining is a complicated process, with many co-products and emissions to

    account for in an inventory. As you gain proficiency working with unit process inventory data, youll

    be well equipped to understand and apply even the most complicated inventory data.

    1. Go to http://www.nrel.gov/lci/

    2. Click on the Database link in the left side navigation box

    3. Select the checkbox for Petroleum and Coal Products Manufacturing within the

    Category list

    4. Click on Diesel, at refinery (Petroleum refining, at refinery), which appears in the list at

    right

    4.6

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    Lecture 4 Supplement Transcript

    In this video supplement, well further explore the concept of unit process inventory scaling in an

    LCA. Furthermore, well use the simplified unit process system for manufacturing of HDPE grocery

    bags from previous supplemental videos to illustrate this concept.

    Recall that each unit process in the system has a unit process inventory, which documents its flows

    to and from nature and to and from the technosphere. You may be wondering how we obtain such

    flow data to construct a unit process inventory in practice. Typically, such data are compiled from

    real-world facilities and operations, and can be based on direct process measurements, engineering

    estimation, or annual facility reporting.

    Take for example the HDPE bag manufacturing plant. It would typically be straightforward to gather

    data on the total tons of HDPE grocery bags manufactured at this plant in a year, since any business

    should know this quantity. It can also be straightforward to gather data on some other annual flow

    quantities, such as the amounts of natural gas, electricity, HDPE pellets, water, and other production

    inputs that are purchased by the plant. Through process-level measurements and/or engineering

    estimation, it can also be possible to determine the plants annual flows of air, water, and land

    emissions and solid waste.

    In this example, were showing data gathered for the annual raw material inputs, CO2 emissions

    outputs, and manufactured product outputs for an example HDPE bag manufacturing plant. Of

    course, in a real LCA we would account for many other flows in our unit process inventories, but to

    keep things simple, well focus on just these three flows for now. Lets also display these data using

    our standard unit process inventory structure.

    Now lets revisit our simplified unit process system for manufacturing HDPE grocery bags. Assume

    that weve gathered similar flow data on the annual raw material inputs, CO2 emissions outputs, and

    manufactured product outputs for each plant in our system. As you see here, weve listed annual

    flow data for each plant in our system using our standard unit process inventory structure.

    Recall from the hot water heater example in Lecture 4 that it is most convenient to express unit

    process inventories on the basis of one unit of product output whenever possible. We do this

    because it makes unit process scaling in a system much easier, as youll see next. To do this for

    HDPE bag manufacturing, wed divide all flows by the total manufactured product output as shown

    in this table. This calculation produces an inventory in which all flows are expressed on the basis of

    one unit of product output; in our case, 1 kg of HDPE grocery bags.

    In this table, weve normalized the inventories to one unit of product output for all other plants in

    the system using the same procedure.

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    Now its time to connect our unit processes into a simple system model in which mass and energy

    requirements are balanced. A straightforward way to do this is to start with a given quantity of final

    product output, and to work our way backward to calculate the quantities of inputs required from

    each proceeding unit process.

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    Lets assume we want to produce 1 kg of HDPE grocery bags. Based on the unit process inventory

    for HDPE bag manufacturing, we see that manufacturing 1 kg of HDPE grocery bags requires 1.02 kg

    of HDPE pellets. Therefore, the HDPE resin manufacturing plant must produce 1.02 kg of HDPE

    pellets to meet the mass input requirements of the HDPE bag manufacturing plant. So we must

    scale up all flows in our unit process inventory for HDPE resin manufacturing by a factor of 1.02 to

    meet this level of production output.

    This procedure reveals to us that to produce 1.02 kg of HDPE pellets, 1.02 kg of ethylene is required

    at the HDPE resin manufacturing plant. Now we must scale up all flows in our unit process inventory

    for ethylene manufacturing by multiplying by a factor of 1.02. Doing so shows us that to produce

    1.02 kg of ethylene, 1.04 kg of processed natural gas is needed at the ethylene manufacturing plant.

    Next, we need to scale up all flows in our unit process inventory for natural gas processing by a

    factor of 1.04, which reveals that, to produce 1.04 kg of processed natural gas, 1.05 kg of kg of

    extracted natural gas are required by the natural gas processing plant.

    Lastly, this means we must scale up all flows in our unit process inventory for natural gas extraction

    by a factor of 1.05. Doing so indicates that 1.08 kg of in-ground natural gas is required as an input

    from nature into the natural gas extraction process.

    Youve just witnessed a simple example of normalizing plant-level flow data into unit process

    inventories expressed on the basis of one unit of product output, and then how those unit processes

    can be related and scaled into a simple unit process system model.

    Note that the final inventory table Ive generated is the same one that allowed us to construct an

    aggregated inventory of all of these unit processes in the Lecture 3 Supplement video. In that video,

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    I mentioned that each unit process had been properly scaled to represent the mass flows required

    by the system to ultimately produce 1 kg of HDPE grocery bags. I hope that statement is clearer to

    you now, as is the need to properly scale unit process inventory data before we can aggregate them.

    Youll gain more practice with normalizing, relating, and scaling unit process inventories in

    Homework 2.

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    Lecture 5: Energy flow basics Transcript

    Today were going to discuss nomenclature and conventions for flows of energy in unit processes

    inventories. Energy flows are common to nearly every type of unit process, and for many products,

    the emissions related to energy flows account for a significant fraction of total life-cycle impacts.

    Therefore, careful consideration of energy flows is critical for credible LCAs.

    Lets first distinguish between two different types of energy flows: energy as a fuel and energy in

    materials. Just as it sounds, energy as a fuel refers to the energy that performs useful work in a

    process. Typical fuels include diesel fuel, gasoline, electricity, and natural gas. In this course, well

    typically document flows of energy used as a fuel in physical units, such as the liters of gasoline or

    the cubic meters of natural gas consumed in a unit process. One major exception is electricity,

    which well always document using kilowatt-hours.

    Energy in materials refers to the inherent energy value of materials used to create products. For

    example, in the United States, our plastic bag contains HDPE that was derived from natural gas. As

    such, the bag itself could be used as a fuel after it is discarded, and it often is in waste to energy

    incinerators. By convention, unit process inventories account for the energy content of such

    materials and denote this as feedstock energy. Well follow that convention in this course as well,

    by making a note in our unit process inventories for any energy flow that should be treated as a

    feedstock. In fact, youll do this yourself when you build your LCA model of bottled soda.

    When it comes to energy as fuels, you also need to understand the difference between primary and

    converted forms of energy. In most energy statistics, primary energy refers to the calorific value of

    fuels found in nature, which includes coal, natural gas, uranium, crude oil, wind, sunlight, and

    biomass. Converted forms of energy are not found in nature, but rather are created by converting

    primary energy sources into more convenient or useful forms. For example, to generate electricity

    we might convert the thermal energy in coal into electricity in a power plant. Or to generate steam,

    we might convert the thermal energy in natural gas into steam in a boiler. Converted forms of

    energy are also commonly called energy carriers. For ease of reference, a list of primary energy

    sources and common energy carriers has been provided in the lecture notes.

    In an LCA, its critically important to account for all energy losses that occur when converting

    primary energy sources into energy carriers. Lets use the example of electricity generation to

    illustrate.

    First, the thermal energy in the input fuel is converted into mechanical work in a turbine, which is

    then converted into electricity in a generator. During the conversion processes, a significant fraction

    of the thermal energy in the input fuel is lost as waste heat to the environment. Some of the

    electricity generated is used in the power plant itself, resulting in additional energy losses. Lastly,

    there are also energy losses in the systems that transmit and distribute electricity from the power

    plant to the consumer. As a result of all these losses, only a fraction of the thermal energy that was

    5.1

    5.3

    5.2

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    contained in the input fuel remains in the electricity that is delivered to the customer. For example,

    in the United States, on average only around 1/3 of the energy that goes into a fossil-fuel-fired

    power plant is contained in the electricity that obtained at the wall plug.

    Why is it important to account for such conversion losses? Lets use a simple example to illustrate.

    Assume we can bake a loaf of bread in a natural gas oven or electric oven. Further assume that the

    energy required to bake the bread is the same in both ovens, say, 5 MJ per loaf. Note that 5 MJ is

    equivalent to 1.4 kWh of electricity. It might seem that both ovens use the same amount of energy,

    and are therefore comparable from an energy use perspective. But lets not forget about the energy

    losses associated with generating and transmitting the electricity used by the electric oven. If we

    assume that the electricity comes from a natural gas-fired power plant, and that the power grid is

    33% efficient, it means that 15 MJ of natural gas are required to provide 5 MJ of electricity to the

    electric oven. In other words, in this particular example the electric oven requires 3 times the

    natural gas to bake a loaf of bread as the natural gas oven.

    What weve just done is to convert an energy carrier (i.e., electricity) back into its original primary

    energy form (i.e., natural gas) in order to facilitate a fair comparison between the two oven options.

    In LCA, well always compare the life-cycle energy use of different products on a primary energy

    basis. In this course, such calculations will be enabled by including all unit processes associated with

    converting primary energy sources into the energy carriers that are ultimately consumed in the life

    cycle system. Or, in other words, well apply life-cycle thinking by considering not just the direct

    energy use of a unit process, but also the cradle-to-gate systems that supply the energy forms used

    the unit process.

    5.4

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    Well do this by clearly labeling all flows of energy carriers as product inputs from the technosphere

    in our unit process inventories. By doing so, well be forced to trace all energy carriers in the system

    back to the original elementary flows of energy from nature. See the lecture notes for some

    examples of this approach.

    By following this approach, well minimize our risk of mistakenly adding primary energy values and

    energy carrier values to each other when summing up energy flows across unit processes, which

    would invalidate our results. Good data sources will always make the distinction between primary

    energy data and energy carrier data in their unit process inventories explicit, but dont be surprised

    if you come across data sources where this distinction is not made. Unfortunately, this is a common

    omission than can render a data source useless.

    Lastly, note that conversion losses vary greatly by input fuel type, energy carrier type, and

    conversion technology type, and all of these can vary greatly by location. For example, a coal-fired

    power grid in China will have different conversion losses than a natural gas power grid in the United

    States. So if our electric oven were in China, a different amount of primary energy would be

    required to bake the bread than if that electric oven were in the United States. As you gain more

    experience with LCA, youll become accustomed to choosing the right unit processes inventories to

    accurately capture conversion losses in different geographical regions.

    Additional notes

    The concept of feedstock energy is most commonly applied in LCA to materials that are derived

    from fossil fuels, including plastics, chemicals, paints, synthetic rubber, and bitumen, to name a few.

    However, feedstock energy is technically relevant to any material that has energetic value, including

    biogenic materials such as wood. In this course, well only denote feedstock energy for plastics and

    paper products, because these two products are the only relevant materials used in our simplified

    grocery bag and bottled soft drink life cycles. In practice, however, youll encounter other product

    life-cycle systems and LCA data sources that track feedstock energy for a much broader range of

    materials.

    In LCA, we also need to be aware that the calorific energy value of fuels can be reported on either a

    higher heating value (HHV) or a lower heating value (LHV) basis in energy statistics. The HHV of a

    fuel, which is also known as its gross calorific value, includes the latent heat of vaporization of water

    in the combustion process. The LHV of a fuel, which is also known as its net calorific value, does not

    include the latent heat of vaporization of water. Therefore, a fuels HHV is higher than its LHV. The

    difference between HHV and LHV depends on the fuel. Ideally, in an LCA one should establish

    whether HHV or LHV bases are used in life cycle inventory data and consistently use only one basis

    throughout the analysis.

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    5.5

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    For a helpful primer on basic energy units and concepts, see the following reference:

    Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, 1991, Energy for sustainable rural

    development projects - Vol.1: A reader: Chapter 1 - Basic energy concepts. Rome.

    http://www.fao.org/docrep/u2246e/u2246e02.htm

    In practice, you may encounter slight differences in the definition of primary energy across the

    various agencies and institutions that compile energy statistics or create regional energy balances.

    In this course, well define primary energy as the energy content or calorific value of fuels found in

    nature prior to any significant conversion or transformation. Energy carriers are defined as more

    convenient forms of energy that are created through conversion or transformation processes from

    primary energy sources. The following table contains the major primary energy sources and energy

    carriers in use in many societies. In the data one uses to compile unit process inventories, one may

    sometimes encounter energy inputs expressed in units of energy carriers, such as kWh or electricity

    or MJ of steam. The important point to remember is that we must consider the primary energy that

    was used to generate each energy carrier, otherwise the true energy cost of a system might be

    undercounted!

    Primary energy sources Common energy carriers

    Biomass Compressed air Coal Conditioned air Crude oil Conditioned water Geothermal heat Electricity Natural gas Mechanical work Running or falling water Refined fuels (gasoline, diesel, kerosene, etc.) Solar energy Steam Tidal energy Uranium

    Wind

    In fact, the average system efficiency of electricity generation, transmission, and distribution in the

    United States has been getting higher in recent years due to technological improvements and a shift

    away from coal and toward natural gas in the electricity grid. As youll learn in Homework 2, the

    efficiency of electricity generation in the United States is closely tied to the type of fossil fuels used

    in its power plants.

    See the Lecture 5 Supplementary video for an example of primary energy versus energy carriers for

    a coal-fired electricity production system.

    5.4

    5.3

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    Lecture Notes for How Green is That Product? 2015 Northwestern University.

    Lecture 5 Supplement Transcript

    To better understand the difference between primary energy and energy carriers, lets consider

    again the example of electricity generation in the United States. This simplified figure depicts the

    major unit processes within a coal-fired electricity system, starting with the coal mine and ending

    with a residential home that consumes the electricity.

    Well use 100 megajoules (MJ) of coal input so you can track energy flows and losses easily through

    the system. Furthermore, well just consider energy flows related to coal and its conversion to

    electricity in this system to keep things simple. In reality, there are many other flows of mass and

    energy associated with these unit processes, which we would normally track in a full life cycle

    assessment.

    First, in-ground coal is extracted from nature and transported by rail to a power plant. Given that

    coal is a raw fuel from nature with minimal processing before it is combusted in the power plant, it

    is considered a form of primary energy. The coal is then combusted in the power plants boiler to

    generate steam, which is an energy carrier.

    Typical co