JG
J.B. Guinée
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The positives and negatives of stationary battery life cycle assessments
Recommendations for modelling the use phase in stationary battery LCA studies from a critical review of current approaches in LCA studies and an LCA of an emerging organic lignin based redox flow battery
In 2050, over 80% of the worldwide electricity demand is expected to be supplied by renewables. The mismatch between supply and demand resulting from these intermittent energy sources and the physical limits of existing electrical grids are challenges in this transition, for which batteries are part of the solution. Therefore, there is a renewed interest to develop advanced and environmentally sound batteries, which requires assessing their environmental impacts by means of life cycle assessment (LCA). However, in current LCA studies the use phase is insufficiently addressed and even oftentimes excluded due to complexity. The aim of this research was to gain insight into current approaches of modelling the use phase in existing LCA and footprinting studies to provide LCA practitioners with recommendations and improved approaches. A literature review was performed which included 26 papers, Annex II of Regulation (EU) No 2019/1020 and the PEFCRs for High Specific Rechargeable Batteries for Mobile Applications. Next to storing renewable energy, batteries can serve different services, also called applications. The implications of incorporating the utilisation of a battery for multiple applications simultaneously, i.e., value stacking, in modelling the use phase are discussed in a qualitative way, since this is emerging as a practical and economically beneficial operational strategy. Finally, the relative effect on a battery’s life cycle impact assessment (LCIA) scores of four issues identified in the literature review is analysed in an illustrative case study about an organic redox flow battery (ORFB).
It appears that many studies do not provide clear information on how the functional unit (FU) is specified, which application(s) the battery is utilised for, application characteristics, modelling assumptions including the electricity and battery inputs or complete LCI data. Overall, the degree of transparency of many battery LCA studies is mediocre which complicates judging the usefulness of results and should be improved to improve comparability and reproducibility for which recommendations are provided. Moreover, the interaction of battery parameters and application characteristics is captured in proposed modelling guidelines for the electricity and battery system input flows. Value stacking results in environmental benefits, particularly when a battery is used to store renewable electricity which is used to serve another application simultaneously. It seems only interesting for battery technologies with high cycle lives such as RFBs and some lithium-ion batteries because these offer the ability to increase battery utilisation without considerably decreasing the battery’s lifetime.
To reach sustainability ambitions, battery applications leading to a reduction in environmental impacts should be promoted for which a general incentive policy is not appropriate. Such policy stimulates all battery applications, which could lead to small or even negative contributions to environmental impact reduction compared to the current situation. Even though this is a temporary transition problem, it could lead to an undesirable interim increase of environmental impacts during the transition. To this end, performing comparative assessments of applications that are expected to be served by batteries in the future, requiring the involvement of transmission network operators, and how these are served in the current situation are useful. ...
It appears that many studies do not provide clear information on how the functional unit (FU) is specified, which application(s) the battery is utilised for, application characteristics, modelling assumptions including the electricity and battery inputs or complete LCI data. Overall, the degree of transparency of many battery LCA studies is mediocre which complicates judging the usefulness of results and should be improved to improve comparability and reproducibility for which recommendations are provided. Moreover, the interaction of battery parameters and application characteristics is captured in proposed modelling guidelines for the electricity and battery system input flows. Value stacking results in environmental benefits, particularly when a battery is used to store renewable electricity which is used to serve another application simultaneously. It seems only interesting for battery technologies with high cycle lives such as RFBs and some lithium-ion batteries because these offer the ability to increase battery utilisation without considerably decreasing the battery’s lifetime.
To reach sustainability ambitions, battery applications leading to a reduction in environmental impacts should be promoted for which a general incentive policy is not appropriate. Such policy stimulates all battery applications, which could lead to small or even negative contributions to environmental impact reduction compared to the current situation. Even though this is a temporary transition problem, it could lead to an undesirable interim increase of environmental impacts during the transition. To this end, performing comparative assessments of applications that are expected to be served by batteries in the future, requiring the involvement of transmission network operators, and how these are served in the current situation are useful. ...
In 2050, over 80% of the worldwide electricity demand is expected to be supplied by renewables. The mismatch between supply and demand resulting from these intermittent energy sources and the physical limits of existing electrical grids are challenges in this transition, for which batteries are part of the solution. Therefore, there is a renewed interest to develop advanced and environmentally sound batteries, which requires assessing their environmental impacts by means of life cycle assessment (LCA). However, in current LCA studies the use phase is insufficiently addressed and even oftentimes excluded due to complexity. The aim of this research was to gain insight into current approaches of modelling the use phase in existing LCA and footprinting studies to provide LCA practitioners with recommendations and improved approaches. A literature review was performed which included 26 papers, Annex II of Regulation (EU) No 2019/1020 and the PEFCRs for High Specific Rechargeable Batteries for Mobile Applications. Next to storing renewable energy, batteries can serve different services, also called applications. The implications of incorporating the utilisation of a battery for multiple applications simultaneously, i.e., value stacking, in modelling the use phase are discussed in a qualitative way, since this is emerging as a practical and economically beneficial operational strategy. Finally, the relative effect on a battery’s life cycle impact assessment (LCIA) scores of four issues identified in the literature review is analysed in an illustrative case study about an organic redox flow battery (ORFB).
It appears that many studies do not provide clear information on how the functional unit (FU) is specified, which application(s) the battery is utilised for, application characteristics, modelling assumptions including the electricity and battery inputs or complete LCI data. Overall, the degree of transparency of many battery LCA studies is mediocre which complicates judging the usefulness of results and should be improved to improve comparability and reproducibility for which recommendations are provided. Moreover, the interaction of battery parameters and application characteristics is captured in proposed modelling guidelines for the electricity and battery system input flows. Value stacking results in environmental benefits, particularly when a battery is used to store renewable electricity which is used to serve another application simultaneously. It seems only interesting for battery technologies with high cycle lives such as RFBs and some lithium-ion batteries because these offer the ability to increase battery utilisation without considerably decreasing the battery’s lifetime.
To reach sustainability ambitions, battery applications leading to a reduction in environmental impacts should be promoted for which a general incentive policy is not appropriate. Such policy stimulates all battery applications, which could lead to small or even negative contributions to environmental impact reduction compared to the current situation. Even though this is a temporary transition problem, it could lead to an undesirable interim increase of environmental impacts during the transition. To this end, performing comparative assessments of applications that are expected to be served by batteries in the future, requiring the involvement of transmission network operators, and how these are served in the current situation are useful.
It appears that many studies do not provide clear information on how the functional unit (FU) is specified, which application(s) the battery is utilised for, application characteristics, modelling assumptions including the electricity and battery inputs or complete LCI data. Overall, the degree of transparency of many battery LCA studies is mediocre which complicates judging the usefulness of results and should be improved to improve comparability and reproducibility for which recommendations are provided. Moreover, the interaction of battery parameters and application characteristics is captured in proposed modelling guidelines for the electricity and battery system input flows. Value stacking results in environmental benefits, particularly when a battery is used to store renewable electricity which is used to serve another application simultaneously. It seems only interesting for battery technologies with high cycle lives such as RFBs and some lithium-ion batteries because these offer the ability to increase battery utilisation without considerably decreasing the battery’s lifetime.
To reach sustainability ambitions, battery applications leading to a reduction in environmental impacts should be promoted for which a general incentive policy is not appropriate. Such policy stimulates all battery applications, which could lead to small or even negative contributions to environmental impact reduction compared to the current situation. Even though this is a temporary transition problem, it could lead to an undesirable interim increase of environmental impacts during the transition. To this end, performing comparative assessments of applications that are expected to be served by batteries in the future, requiring the involvement of transmission network operators, and how these are served in the current situation are useful.
It Depends: The importance of transparent reporting in LCA conclusions
Exploring key considerations for reporting and communication of LCA conclusions to designers, in the context of allocation and modelling choices regarding recycling in a circular economy
The environmental impacts created by human activity have exceeded planetary boundaries, leading to the need for change towards a circular economy (CE) from a linear economy. The CE aims to reduce environmental impact by focusing on responsible production and consumption. It is achieved by avoiding the outflow of materials and reducing environmental impact as much as possible. Analytical tools such as LCA are necessary to map the environmental impacts of different CE alternatives serving the same product system and assist in finding the most environmentally preferable option. It is essential to make credible, transparent and reproducible assessments of the environmental impact of circular strategies compared with incumbent ways of working. Many databases and software programs used to perform LCAs do not explicitly and transparently solve multifunctionality, which can lead to distorted information and inaccurate decision-making. The report emphasizes the importance of a systematic approach to solve and identify multifunctionality within CE-LCA and improve the reporting of LCAs to make them more transparent. While the CE concept, when implemented in practice by designing products, often leads to reductions in environmental impacts throughout product life cycles, this is not always the case. Design decisions should be based on credible, transparent and reproducible assessments of environmental impacts, and not on assumptions. The focus is on how different choices in modelling recycling and identifying multifunctionality are made in LCA literature, and how reporting can be improved. This report investigates the modelling and reporting of recycling loops in LCA studies that address circular economy systems, with a focus on the ecoinvent database.
This study aims to answer the research question ‘How are recycling loops modelled and reported in LCA studies addressing circular economy systems and in the most widely used LCA database ecoinvent; and how can reporting be improved to better and more transparently communicate conclusions of LCAs to product designers?’ ...
This study aims to answer the research question ‘How are recycling loops modelled and reported in LCA studies addressing circular economy systems and in the most widely used LCA database ecoinvent; and how can reporting be improved to better and more transparently communicate conclusions of LCAs to product designers?’ ...
The environmental impacts created by human activity have exceeded planetary boundaries, leading to the need for change towards a circular economy (CE) from a linear economy. The CE aims to reduce environmental impact by focusing on responsible production and consumption. It is achieved by avoiding the outflow of materials and reducing environmental impact as much as possible. Analytical tools such as LCA are necessary to map the environmental impacts of different CE alternatives serving the same product system and assist in finding the most environmentally preferable option. It is essential to make credible, transparent and reproducible assessments of the environmental impact of circular strategies compared with incumbent ways of working. Many databases and software programs used to perform LCAs do not explicitly and transparently solve multifunctionality, which can lead to distorted information and inaccurate decision-making. The report emphasizes the importance of a systematic approach to solve and identify multifunctionality within CE-LCA and improve the reporting of LCAs to make them more transparent. While the CE concept, when implemented in practice by designing products, often leads to reductions in environmental impacts throughout product life cycles, this is not always the case. Design decisions should be based on credible, transparent and reproducible assessments of environmental impacts, and not on assumptions. The focus is on how different choices in modelling recycling and identifying multifunctionality are made in LCA literature, and how reporting can be improved. This report investigates the modelling and reporting of recycling loops in LCA studies that address circular economy systems, with a focus on the ecoinvent database.
This study aims to answer the research question ‘How are recycling loops modelled and reported in LCA studies addressing circular economy systems and in the most widely used LCA database ecoinvent; and how can reporting be improved to better and more transparently communicate conclusions of LCAs to product designers?’
This study aims to answer the research question ‘How are recycling loops modelled and reported in LCA studies addressing circular economy systems and in the most widely used LCA database ecoinvent; and how can reporting be improved to better and more transparently communicate conclusions of LCAs to product designers?’