4.6 Article

Functionality-based life cycle assessment framework: An information and communication technologies (ICT) product case study

Journal

JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL ECOLOGY
Volume 26, Issue 3, Pages 782-800

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jiec.13240

Keywords

consumer behavior; electronics; industrial ecology; information and communication technologies; life cycle assessment; product design

Funding

  1. Sykes Family Fellowship
  2. McGeeand Levorsen Research Grant
  3. Emmett InterdisciplinaryProgramin Environment and Resources (E-IPER)
  4. Charles& RobertaKatz Family Fellowship

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Life cycle assessment (LCA) is widely used to evaluate the environmental impacts of ICT products. This study proposes a user-oriented, functionality-based LCA (FLCA) framework to analyze the environmental impact of multifunctional ICT products. The study provides a computational method and applies it to two case studies to demonstrate the application of FLCA.
Life cycle assessment (LCA) has been widely applied to assessing the environmental impacts of information and communication technologies (ICT) products throughout their lifetime. Building upon LCA methodology, this study proposes a user-oriented, functionality-based LCA (FLCA) framework that evaluates the environmental impact of multifunctional ICT products such as smartphones. Incorporating the quality function deployment and LCA literature, we develop an approach that highlights the linkages among user behavior, product functionalities, and product environmental footprints. We use matrix algebra to outline a computational method and a streamlined process to operationalize such analysis. FLCA analyzes the impact of materials in the context of how they are used. To illustrate the concept with a simple example, our first case study calculates the manufacturing GHG emissions of a well-known multifunctional product, a Swiss Army knife. In the second case study, we estimate the functionality-based GHG emissions of a hypothetical smartphone. We consider various scopes of impact, including at the levels of device, infrastructure, and supply chains. Extending from LCA methods, FLCA moves away from a general understanding of functionality to a more granular perspective to accommodate the complexity in modern ICT products. Our study advances a user-oriented perspective to understand product sustainability impacts. Additionally, it offers a method to provide empirical evidence of the hidden impacts of industrial products during consumption, enabling more precise linkage of the production-consumption relationship through LCA toward better design to uncover and address users' needs.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available