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LCA Methodology



Fate Modelling Within LCA
The Case of Textile Chemicals
Almut Beck; Martin Scheringer; Konrad Hungerbühler
Corresponding author:: Dr. Martin Scheringer, Laboratory of Chemical Engineering, ETH Zentrum, CH-8092 Zürich; e-mail: scheringer@tech.chem.ethz.ch

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DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1065/lca2000.09.032 - - - For an accurate assessment of the toxic effects of chemicals during their life cycle, LCA developers try more and more to include chemical fate into the life-cycle impact assessment (LCIA) procedure. In this study the application of multi-media partitioning models within LCIA is discussed. With the case of textile chemicals as an example, USES-LCA and a simple river model (box approach) are compared according to their practicability and the value added to the assessment results. It is shown that emissions from the supply and use of energy still dominate the LCIA results even if ecotoxicity is assessed with a rather complex fate model such as USES-LCA. Second, the treatment of modelling results is addressed for persistent substances with low or unknown toxicity. A possible approach to include such chemicals into valuation is to define an exposure-based impact category additionally to the existing effect-oriented ones (toxicity scores) or a combination of different methods. A combined presentation of results from complementary tools is proposed, providing a more detailed background for decision making while avoiding aggregation and leaving the final weighting between the categories to the user.

5 LCA (6) 335-344 (2000)

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