Abstract

PurposeLife cycle assessment (LCA) is an internationally accepted method to assess the environmental impacts of buildings. A major methodological challenge remains the modelling of the end-of-life stage of buildings and allocation of benefits and burdens between systems. Various approaches are hence applied in practice to date. This paper compares the two methods widely renowned in Europe—the EC product environmental footprint (PEF) method and the CEN standards: EN 15804+A1 and EN15978—and offers insights about their fitness for achieving circularity goals.MethodsThe EC PEF method and the CEN EN 15804/EN 15978 standards were methodologically analysed with a focus on the end-of-life modelling and allocation approach and were applied to a building case study. The EN 15804+A1 standard explains the guidelines but does not offer a modelling formula. Accordingly, this paper proposes a formula for the CEN standards using identical parameters as in the end-of-life circular footprint formula (CFF) of the EC PEF Guidance v6.3 to increase consistency among LCA studies. The calculation formulas were then applied to a newly constructed office building. A comparative analysis of both the implementation and results are described, and recommendations are formulated.ResultsIn the absence of databases compatible with the two LCA methods and comprising all building products, the Ecoinvent datasets had to be remodelled to enable a comparative modular assessment. This proved to be a laborious process. The EC PEF method and CEN standards showed similar impacts and hotspots for the case study building. The module D in the CEN standards includes a significant share of positive impacts, but due to collective accounting, it does not clearly communicate these benefits. The summation of burdens and benefits in the EC PEF method reduces its transparency, while the allocation and quality factors enable this method to better capture the market realities and drive circular economy goals.ConclusionsThe construction sector and the LCI database developers are encouraged to create the missing LCA databases compatible with the modular and end-of-life allocation modelling requirements of both methods. More prescriptive and meticulous guidelines, with further harmonization between the EC PEF method and the CEN standards and their end-of-life allocation formula, would largely increase comparability and reliability of LCA studies and communications. To improve transparency, it is recommended to report the module D impacts per life cycle stage as per the CEN standards and the burdens and benefits separately for each life cycle stage as per the EC PEF method.

Highlights

  • Life cycle assessment (LCA) is a quantitative method to assess the environmental impacts of products and services and can assist in informed decision making and policy development

  • The CEN standard EN 15804+A1:2013 has been extensively used throughout Europe to establish environmental product declarations (EPDs) of construction products (Passer et al 2015), while the EN 15978:2011 is used for the assessment of the life cycle environmental impact of buildings

  • The two prominent LCA methods in Europe, the European Commission (EC) product environmental footprint (PEF) method and the CEN standards EN 15804+A1 and EN15978 were compared with a focus on the end-of-life modelling and allocation approach

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Summary

Introduction

Life cycle assessment (LCA) is a quantitative method to assess the environmental impacts of products and services and can assist in informed decision making and policy development. Various LCA methods have been developed to date. The EN 15804/EN 15978 standards focus on LCA of construction products and buildings and are part of the suite of standards developed by CEN/TC 350 (AFNOR Normalisation 2017). The CEN standard EN 15804+A1:2013 has been extensively used throughout Europe to establish environmental product declarations (EPDs) of construction products (Passer et al 2015), while the EN 15978:2011 is used for the assessment of the life cycle environmental impact of buildings. Integrating EPDs in streamlined LCA and design process of buildings, is still a challenge (Minkov et al 2015)

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