Abstract

Climate change will require societal-scale infrastructural changes. Balancing priorities for water, energy, and climate will demand that approaches to water and energy management deviate from historical practice. Infrastructure designed to mitigate environmental harm, particularly related to climate change, is likely to become increasingly prevalent. Understanding the implications of such infrastructure for environmental quality is thus of interest. Environmental life cycle assessment (LCA) is a common sustainability assessment tool that aims to quantify the total, multicriteria environmental impact caused by a functional unit. Notably, however, LCA quantifies impacts in the form of environmental “costs” of delivering the functional unit. In the case of mitigation infrastructures, LCA results can be confusing because they are generally reported as the harmful impacts of performing mitigation rather than as net impacts that incorporate benefits of successful mitigation. This paper argues for defining mitigation LCA as a subtype of LCA to facilitate better understanding of results and consistency across studies. Our recommendations are informed by existing LCA literature on mitigation infrastructure, focused particularly on stormwater and carbon management. We specifically recommend that analysts: (1) use a performance-based functional unit; (2) be attentive to burden shifting; and (3) assess and define uncertainty, especially related to mitigation performance.

Highlights

  • Life cycle assessment (LCA) is a sustainability quantification tool used to assess and evaluate multicriteria impacts of all activities associated with an unit of analysis—for example, a product, process, system, or service [1,2,3,4]

  • We present our findings in the form of three recommendations for best practice in mitigation LCA: (1) use a performance-based functional unit to ensure comparability across mitigation outcomes; (2) be attentive to burden shifting by carefully selecting analytical boundaries, including product system boundaries and inclusion of appropriate impact categories; and

  • LCA is a sustainability quantification method designed to assess the multicriteria environmental pressure associated with a given human activity, which makes it a useful tool for evaluating mitigation infrastructure

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Summary

Introduction

Life cycle assessment (LCA) is a sustainability quantification tool used to assess and evaluate multicriteria impacts of all activities associated with an unit of analysis—for example, a product, process, system, or service [1,2,3,4]. This unit of analysis, called a functional unit, explicitly defines what is being assessed, usually with reference to a particular function over a period of time. LCA is used to evaluate negative environmental impacts resulting from life cycle activities from resource extraction through end-of-life associated with a product system [5,6]. In practice many life cycle studies highlight climate pollution [16], the multicriteria nature of LCA is Energies 2020, 13, 992; doi:10.3390/en13040992 www.mdpi.com/journal/energies

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