From Life Cycle Assessment to Life Cycle Management |
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Authors: | Pere Fullana i Palmer Rita Puig Alba Bala Grau Baquero Jordi Riba Marco Raugei |
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Affiliation: | 1. professor and director of both the UNESCO Chair in life cycle and climate change and the Environmental Management Research Group (GiGa) at the Escola Superior de Comer? Internacional (Universitat Pompeu Fabra) in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain.;2. professor and director at EEI, the Engineering School of Igualada (Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya), Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain;3. senior researchers at GiGa and the UNESCO Chair.;4. PhD student at EEI.;5. professor |
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Abstract: | Life cycle assessment (LCA) is a widely accepted methodology to support decision‐making processes in which one compares alternatives, and that helps prevent shifting of environmental burdens along the value chain or among impact categories. According to regulation in the European Union (EU), the movement of waste needs to be reduced and, if unavoidable, the environmental gain from a specific waste treatment option requiring transport must be larger than the losses arising from transport. The EU explicitly recommends the use of LCA or life cycle thinking for the formulation of new waste management plans. In the last two revisions of the Industrial Waste Management Programme of Catalonia (PROGRIC), the use of a life cycle thinking approach to waste policy was mandated. In this article we explain the process developed to arrive at practical life cycle management (LCM) from what started as an LCA project. LCM principles we have labeled the “3/3” principle or the “good enough is best” principle were found to be essential to obtain simplified models that are easy to understand for legislators and industries, useful in waste management regulation, and, ultimately, feasible. In this article, we present the four models of options for the management of waste solvent to be addressed under Catalan industrial waste management regulation. All involved actors concluded that the models are sufficiently robust, are easy to apply, and accomplish the aim of limiting the transport of waste outside Catalonia, according to the principles of proximity and sufficiency. |
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Keywords: | industrial ecology life cycle assessment (LCA) life cycle management (LCM) life cycle thinking (LCT) waste management waste solvents |
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