4.8 Article

Quantifying Area Changes of Internationally Important Wetlands Due to Water Consumption in LCA

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 47, Issue 17, Pages 9799-9807

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/es400266v

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Funding

  1. ETH Research Grant [CH1-0208-3]
  2. European Commission under the Seventh Framework Program on Environment [ENV.2009.3.3.2.1]

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Wetlands harbor diverse species assemblages but are among the world's most threatened ecosystems. Half of their global area was lost during the last century. No approach currently exists in life cycle impact assessment that acknowledges the vulnerability and importance of wetlands globally and provides fate factors for water consumption. We use data from 1184 inland wetlands, all designated as sites of international importance under the Ramsar Convention, to develop regionalized fate factors (FF) for consumptive water use. FFs quantify the change of wetland area caused per m(3)/yr water consumed. We distinguish between surface water-fed and groundwater-fed wetlands and develop FFs for surface water and groundwater consumption. FFs vary over 8 (surface water-fed) and 6 (groundwater-fed) orders of magnitude as a function of the site characteristics, showing the importance of local conditions. Largest FFs for surface water-fed wetlands generally occur in hyper-arid zones and smallest in humid zones, highlighting the dependency on available surface water flows. FFs for groundwater-fed wetlands depend on hydrogeological conditions and vary largely with the total amount of water consumed from the aquifer. Our FFs translate water consumption into wetland area loss and thus become compatible with life cycle assessment methodologies of land use.

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