4.7 Article

Promoting sustainable consumption with LCA - A social practice based perspective

期刊

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
卷 283, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2020.125234

关键词

Life cycle assessment (LCA); Practice theory; Sustainable consumption; Environmental assessment; Rebound effect

资金

  1. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research within the project 'Upscaling Strategies for an Urban Sharing Society' [01UU1701B]
  2. Vereinigung der Freunde desWuppertal Instituts e.V.

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Quantitative environmental assessments are important for achieving sustainable production and consumption patterns, with life cycle assessments being a viable means of measuring environmental impacts. However, there are methodological weaknesses in terms of user and consumption patterns, and the introduction of social practice theories can provide a new perspective for linking consumption patterns to LCA. This approach can help overcome the reductionist view of people as mere users of products and enable new interdisciplinary research methods on consumption.
Quantitative environmental assessments are crucial in working effectively towards sustainable production and consumption patterns. Over the last decades, life cycle assessments (LCA) have been established as a viable means of measuring the environmental impacts of products along the supply chain. In regard to user and consumption patterns, however, methodological weaknesses have been reported and, several attempts have been made to improve LCA accordingly, for example, by including higher order effects and behavioural science support. In a discussion of such approaches, we show that there has been no explicit attention to the concepts of consumption, often leading to product-centred assessments. We introduce social practice theories in order to make consumption patterns accessible to LCA. Social practices are routinised actions comprising interconnected elements (materials, competences, and meanings), which make them conceivable as one entity (e.g. cooking). Because most social practices include some sort of consumption (materials, energy, air), we were able to develop a framework which links social practices to the life cycle inventory of LCA. The proposed framework provides a new perspective of quantitative environmental assessments by switching the focus from products or users to social practices. Accordingly, we see the opportunity in overcoming the reductionist view that people are just users of products, and instead we see them as practitioners in social practises. This change could enable new methods of interdisciplinary research on consumption, integrating intend-oriented social sciences and impact-oriented assessments. However, the framework requires further revision and, especially, empirical validation. (C) 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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