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A discussion on the availability of life-cycle assessment studies in New Zealand
Authors:Shaun Engelbrecht  A O Ladenika  O S MacGregor  Mpho Maepa  Michael O Bodunrin  Nicholas W Burman  Joel Croft  Taahira Goga  Kevin G Harding
Institution:1.School of Chemical and Metallurgical Engineering,University of the Witwatersrand,Johannesburg,South Africa;2.NRF/DST Chair: Sustainable Process Engineering Unit,University of the Witwatersrand,Johannesburg,South Africa;3.DST-NRF Centre of Excellence in Strong Materials; African Materials Science and Engineering Network,University of the Witwatersrand,Johannesburg,South Africa;4.Industrial and Mining Water Research Unit (IMWaRU),University of the Witwatersrand,Johannesburg,South Africa;5.Centre in Water Research and Development (CiWaRD),University of the Witwatersrand,Johannesburg,South Africa;6.Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering,Federal University of Technology Akure,Akure,Nigeria
Abstract:

Purpose

In order to understand the environmental impacts of various products, processes, or services, it should be possible to obtain life-cycle assessment (LCA) reports quickly and easily without having to delve into restricted access or hidden databases. The aim of this study is to assess the availability of environmental LCAs, water footprinting, and carbon footprinting studies conducted in New Zealand.

Methods

To review the quantitative availability of life-cycle assessment studies for New Zealand, simple online searches were performed using the Google and Google Scholar search engines. Additionally, ScienceDirect and Scopus were used to determine the availability of other peer-reviewed LCA-related reports.

Results and discussion

For the period under review, 20 documents were publicly available. Additionally, other searches conducted via ScienceDirect, Scopus and Google Scholar yielded a further 15 restricted documents. The results included data carbon- and water footprinting studies. The number of LCAs and carbon footprinting reports both exceeded those of water footprinting.

Conclusions

Over 35 studies were available through Internet searches. This number excludes wool which had six results (Scopus only) and many more through Google. These were not included due to possible repetition and miscounting of results.
Keywords:
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