Abstract

In recent years, there has been growing attention from the scientific community regarding the environmental impact of commercial goods, pushing companies to adopt life cycle assessment strategies to improve their environmental profile. Only few studies have examined the environmental burdens of electric motors, specifically for stationary applications such as oil and gas plants, transmission organs, operating machines, or other industrial utilization. For this purpose, this paper presents a comprehensive and detailed evaluation of the environmental sustainability of an asynchronous electric motor used for stationary applications. The motor under examination moves a stand-by hydraulic pump used in a compression plant to lubricate the bearings of centrifugal machines. The principles dictated by ISO 14040 are implemented, and a cradle-to-gate analysis is performed. This article reports in detail the inventory hypothesis and the steps that led to modeling the assessed electric motor. The results are presented for all impact categories provided by the ReCiPe methodology. Additionally, a breakdown of the eco-indicators at the single component level is proposed, focusing on the impact of raw material extraction phases and subsequent technological processes. The last section highlights which components contribute predominantly, both from a materials and processes perspective, and the environmental hotspots in the modeled supply chain are identified.

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