4.4 Article

Life cycle assessment of bacterial cellulose production

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LIFE CYCLE ASSESSMENT
Volume 26, Issue 5, Pages 864-878

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11367-021-01904-2

Keywords

Bacterial cellulose; LCA; ReCiPe 2016; Climate change; Energy consumption; Water consumption

Funding

  1. Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) [UIDB/04469/2020, UIDB/00511/2020, SAICTPAC/0040/2015-POCI-01-0145FEDER-016403]
  2. Navigator Company through the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) [21874]
  3. Programa Operacional Competitividade e Internacionalizacao (POCI)
  4. Laboratory for Process Engineering, Environment, Biotechnology and Energy-LEPABE - FCT/MCTES (PIDDAC) [UIDB/00511/2020]

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Bacterial cellulose (BC), produced through fermentation, is a promising material with a wide range of potential applications. This study quantified the environmental, health, and resource depletion impacts associated with BC production, highlighting the significant impact of water resources and the production of raw materials on environmental indicators such as climate change, fossil depletion, and human toxicity.
Purpose Bacterial cellulose (BC), obtained by fermentation, is an innovative and promising material with a broad spectrum of potential applications. Despite the increasing efforts towards its industrialization, a deeper understanding of the environmental impact related to the BC production process is still required. This work aimed at quantifying the environmental, health, and resource depletion impacts related to a production of BC. Methods An attributional life cycle assessment (LCA) was applied to a process design of production of BC, by static culture, following a cradle-to-gate approach. The LCA was modeled with GaBi Pro Software using the ReCiPe 2016 (H) methodology with environmental impact indicators at midpoint level. The functional unit was defined as 1 kg of BC (dry mass), in 138.8 kg of water. Results From the total used resources (38.9 ton/kg of BC), water is the main one (36.1 ton/kg of BC), most of which (98%) is returned to fresh waters after treatment. The production of raw materials consumed 17.8 ton of water/kg of BC, 13.8 ton/kg of BC of which was for the production of carton packaging, culture medium raw materials, and sodium hydroxide (for the washing of BC). The remaining consumed water was mainly for the fermentation (3.9 ton/kg) and downstream process (7.7 ton/kg). From the identified potential environmental impacts, the production of raw materials had the highest impact, mainly on Climate change, Fossil depletion, Human toxicity, non-cancer, and Terrestrial toxicity. The sodium dihydrogen phosphate production, used in the culture medium, showed the highest environmental impacts in Human toxicity, non-cancer and Terrestrial ecotoxicity, followed by corn syrup and carton production. The static culture fermentation and downstream process showed impact in Climate change and Fossil depletion. Conclusions Per se, the BC production process had a small contribution to the consumption of resources and environmental impact of the BC global life cycle.

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