Abstract

A case of household water tanks, 1000 L capacity, made of RCC, LLDPE and mild steel (stainless steel) was evaluated for life cycle analysis. The scope of the research comprised of the raw materials, energy inputs and corresponding emissions during all phases of product making such as extraction of raw material, it’s processing, followed by manufacturing and transport, as well as use and reuse of the product. Simapro 8 (System for Integrated environMental Assessment of PROducts), a modelling software, from Dutch PRe Consultants was used to conduct the life cycle analysis. Simapro 8 enables systematic and transparent modelling and analysis of complex life cycles based on the recommendations of the ISO 14040 series of standards. In the present study the most common method which is acceptable worldwide “Recipe Endpoint method” (ReCiPe) was employed. ReCiPe computes the impact categories and classifies them into two classes based on relevant arrays of characterization factors. Simapro addresses impact categories viz. ozone depletion, human toxicity, ionizing radiation, photochemical oxidant formation, particulate matter formation, terrestrial acidification, climate change, terrestrial ecotoxicity, agricultural land occupation, urban land occupation, natural land transformation, marine ecotoxicity, marine eutrophication, fresh water eutrophication, fresh water ecotoxicity, fossil fuel depletion, minerals depletion, fresh water depletion at the midpoint level. While at the Endpoint level, the impact categories are multiplied by corresponding damage factors and integrated to be represented as three Endpoint level categories, viz. human health, ecosystems and resource depletion. The three endpoint categories are normalized, weighted, and aggregated into a single score. LCA studies indicate that household water tanks of LLDPE have least environmental implications considering impacts on human health, ecosystems and resource depletion as compared to its counterparts viz. Household water tanks made up of mild steel and RCC. The sequence of the material with decreasing impacts is concrete tanks > mild steel tank > LLDPE tanks. The overall assessment is centred on the elements such as material inputs, energy inputs and environmental emissions.

Highlights

  • Ensuring the availability of water for domestic requirements is indispensible in every household

  • The environmental impacts of a product can be evaluated through life cycle assessment (LCA) which comprises of assessing the journey of a product right from the extraction of raw materials from the earth to the waste products being returned back to the earth

  • This article deliberates upon the environmental impacts of domestic water tanks made of mild steel, RCC and Linear Low-Density Polyethylene (LLDPE) grounded on life cycle assessment (LCA) studies

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Summary

Introduction

Ensuring the availability of water for domestic requirements is indispensible in every household. In the present study, considering the average daily requirement of a house, a 1000 L water tank is normally required to meet the requirements. At present this 1000 L water tank can be constructed using RCC, mild steel or polymer. The environmental impacts of a product can be evaluated through life cycle assessment (LCA) which comprises of assessing the journey of a product right from the extraction of raw materials from the earth to the waste products being returned back to the earth. This article deliberates upon the environmental impacts of domestic water tanks made of mild steel, RCC and LLDPE grounded on life cycle assessment (LCA) studies

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