The Glasgow consensus on the delineation between pesticide emission inventory and impact assessment for LCA
-
Published:2015-03-28
Issue:6
Volume:20
Page:765-776
-
ISSN:0948-3349
-
Container-title:The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Int J Life Cycle Assess
Author:
Rosenbaum Ralph K.,Anton Assumpció,Bengoa Xavier,Bjørn Anders,Brain Richard,Bulle Cécile,Cosme Nuno,Dijkman Teunis J.,Fantke Peter,Felix Mwema,Geoghegan Trudyanne S.,Gottesbüren Bernhard,Hammer Carolyn,Humbert Sebastien,Jolliet Olivier,Juraske Ronnie,Lewis Fraser,Maxime Dominique,Nemecek Thomas,Payet Jérôme,Räsänen Kati,Roux Philippe,Schau Erwin M.,Sourisseau Sandrine,van Zelm Rosalie,von Streit Bettina,Wallman Magdalena
Abstract
Abstract
Purpose
Pesticides are applied to agricultural fields to optimise crop yield and their global use is substantial. Their consideration in life cycle assessment (LCA) is affected by important inconsistencies between the emission inventory and impact assessment phases of LCA. A clear definition of the delineation between the product system model (life cycle inventory—LCI, technosphere) and the natural environment (life cycle impact assessment—LCIA, ecosphere) is missing and could be established via consensus building.
Methods
A workshop held in 2013 in Glasgow, UK, had the goal of establishing consensus and creating clear guidelines in the following topics: (1) boundary between emission inventory and impact characterisation model, (2) spatial dimensions and the time periods assumed for the application of substances to open agricultural fields or in greenhouses and (3) emissions to the natural environment and their potential impacts. More than 30 specialists in agrifood LCI, LCIA, risk assessment and ecotoxicology, representing industry, government and academia from 15 countries and four continents, met to discuss and reach consensus. The resulting guidelines target LCA practitioners, data (base) and characterisation method developers, and decision makers.
Results and discussion
The focus was on defining a clear interface between LCI and LCIA, capable of supporting any goal and scope requirements while avoiding double counting or exclusion of important emission flows/impacts. Consensus was reached accordingly on distinct sets of recommendations for LCI and LCIA, respectively, recommending, for example, that buffer zones should be considered as part of the crop production system and the change in yield be considered. While the spatial dimensions of the field were not fixed, the temporal boundary between dynamic LCI fate modelling and steady-state LCIA fate modelling needs to be defined.
Conclusions and recommendations
For pesticide application, the inventory should report pesticide identification, crop, mass applied per active ingredient, application method or formulation type, presence of buffer zones, location/country, application time before harvest and crop growth stage during application, adherence with Good Agricultural Practice, and whether the field is considered part of the technosphere or the ecosphere. Additionally, emission fractions to environmental media on-field and off-field should be reported. For LCIA, the directly concerned impact categories and a list of relevant fate and exposure processes were identified. Next steps were identified: (1) establishing default emission fractions to environmental media for integration into LCI databases and (2) interaction among impact model developers to extend current methods with new elements/processes mentioned in the recommendations.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Environmental Science
Reference97 articles.
1. Akbar TA, Lin H (2010) GIS based ArcPRZM-3 model for bentazon leaching towards groundwater. J Environ Sci (China) 22:1854–1859 2. Antón A, Castells F, Montero JI, Huijbregts M (2004) Comparison of toxicological impacts of integrated and chemical pest management in Mediterranean greenhouses. Chemosphere 54:1225–1235 3. Armstrong AC, Matthews AM, Portwood AM, Leeds-Harrison PB, Jarvis NJ (2000) CRACK-NP: a pesticide leaching model for cracking clay soils. Agric Water Manag 44:85–104 4. Audsley E, Alber S, Clift R, Cowell S, Crettaz P, Gaillard G, Hausheer J, Jolliet O, Kleijn R, Mortensen B, Pearce D, Roger E, Teulon H, Weidema B, Van Zeijts H (2003) Harmonisation of environmental life cycle assessment for agriculture. Eur Comm DG VI Agric 101 5. Bare J (2011) TRACI 2.0: the tool for the reduction and assessment of chemical and other environmental impacts 2.0. Clean Technol Environ Policy 13:687–696
Cited by
67 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|