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Towards harmonised and regionalised life cycle assessment of fruits: A review on citrus fruit

Journal

SUSTAINABLE PRODUCTION AND CONSUMPTION
Volume 33, Issue -, Pages 567-585

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.spc.2022.07.024

Keywords

Life Cycle Assessment; Environmental impact; Citrus fruits; Perennial crop cycle; Harmonisation; Regionalisation

Funding

  1. National Research and Innovation Agency
  2. [POS_EXT_2018_1_154319]

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The citrus fruit sector has a global impact, and conducting life cycle assessments can have a positive effect on the environment. However, there are methodological issues in the assessment of citrus fruits that need further research and improvement. The production and emissions of pesticides and fertilisers are identified as major hotspots, and there is a lack of studies on the early stages of citrus fruit production. The representativeness of farms and the assessment of impacts are highlighted as critical issues.
The citrus fruit sector is globally relevant. Considering the great contribution of agri-food systems to environmen-tal impacts, assessing and reducing them can make a positive contribution to the environment. Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) is a widespread tool used to quantify the complex environmental interactions of agri-food sys-tems in general and perennial fruit crops in particular. However, methodological aspects need to be harmonised to perform useful and representative LCAs on fruits. The goal of this study is to provide an updated descriptive and critical review of the state of the art of LCA research into citrus fruits. We aim to identify the main method-ological decisions, paying special attention to crop cycle modelling and regional representability. Bearing this in mind, we propose recommendations for a harmonised application of LCA on citrus fruits, identifying areas wor-thy of further research. The main hotspots of the production process are also identified, to understand where im-provement efforts should be directed to. To this end, a two-step search was carried out and a final sample of 23 records was obtained. The production of both pesticides and fertilisers together with their on -field emissions are the main hotspots in the reviewed articles. Regarding areas for further research, a lack of studies into the early stages of citrus fruit production is detected. Farm representativeness, both temporal and spatial, is highlighted as a critical issue when assessing regional fruit production. This implies improving life cycle inventories, namely by using site-specific methods to estimate fertiliser and pesticide emissions, developing regionalized datasets of agricultural inputs, and strengthening water inventories. As to the impact assessment, the estimation of both water scarcity and biodiversity impacts is encouraged, together with the use of regionalised impact characterisa-tion methods. Boosting LCA studies on citrus fruits producing countries outside the European Union along with the use of other sustainability tools can support the development of environmental policies. The results of this review can be beneficial for both LCA practitioners and decision-makers, paving the way for a more responsible and sustainable citrus fruit production. (c) 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of Institution of Chemical Engineers. This is an open ac-cess article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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