4.6 Article

Comparison of Tools for Quantifying the Environmental Performance of an Urban Territory

Journal

JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL ECOLOGY
Volume 22, Issue 4, Pages 868-880

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jiec.12614

Keywords

energy consumption; environmentally extended input-output analysis (EEIOA); greenhouse gas emissions; industrial ecology; life cycle assessment (LCA); material flow analysis (MFA)

Funding

  1. European Commission, through the Erasmus Mundus Program
  2. FCT/MEC [UID/AMB/50017]
  3. FEDER, within the PT2020 Partnership Agreement
  4. FEDER, within the Compete 2020

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To support effective urban policies aimed at decreasing the environmental impacts of cities, it is important to develop robust tools for accounting those impacts. Environmentally extended input-output analysis (EEIOA) is among the most used tools for this purpose, allowing the quantification of both direct and indirect impacts. Life cycle assessment (LCA) is also a holistic and comprehensive tool that accounts for direct and indirect impactsbut its application to cities is still very recent. This study aims at applying EEIOA and LCA to the municipality of Aveiro (Portugal) in order to compare the outcomes of the two tools in terms of total impacts (climate change and fossil fuel depletion) and hotspots (sectors/products contributing most to the impacts), to identify limitations and advantages of the tools when applied to Aveiro, and to illustrate how LCA can be applied to cities. The total impacts estimated with LCA and EEIOA were similar and the hotspots were also the same: transports, food, construction, and electricity. However, the relative contribution of some sectors was very different in the two tools due to methodological differences mainly in system boundaries, type of activities or products considered in each sector, and geographical coverage of impact data. This study concludes that the analyzed tools can provide complementary results to support decision making concerning urban planning and management.

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