LCA of aquaculture systems : methodological issues and potential improvements

Purpose: The aquaculture sector is the fastest growing food production industry. Life-cycle assessment (LCA) can be a useful tool to assess its environmental impacts and ensure environmentally sustainable development. Years ago, critical reviews of LCA methodology have been conducted in that field t...

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Main Authors: Bohnes, Florence Alexia, Laurent, Alexis
Other Authors: School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147098
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1470982021-03-23T01:08:52Z LCA of aquaculture systems : methodological issues and potential improvements Bohnes, Florence Alexia Laurent, Alexis School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering Nanyang Technological University Food Technology Centre Engineering::Chemical engineering Aquafeed Fish Purpose: The aquaculture sector is the fastest growing food production industry. Life-cycle assessment (LCA) can be a useful tool to assess its environmental impacts and ensure environmentally sustainable development. Years ago, critical reviews of LCA methodology have been conducted in that field to evaluate methodological practice. However, how effective were these reviews in improving LCA application? Are there any remaining issues that LCA practitioners should address in their practice? Methods: We tackle the above questions by critically reviewing all LCA cases applied to aquaculture and aquafeed production systems from a methodological point of view. A total of 65 studies were retrieved, thus tripling the scope of previous reviews. The studies were analysed following the main phases of the LCA methodology as described in the ISO standards, and the authors’ choices were extracted to identify potential trends in the LCA practice. Results and discussion: We identified five main methodological issues, which still pose challenges to LCA practitioners: (i) the functional unit not always reflecting the actual function of the system, (ii) the system boundary often being too restricted, (iii) the multi-functionality of processes too often being handled with economic allocation while more recommendable ways exist, (iv) the impact coverage not covering all environmental impacts relevant to aquaculture and (v) the interpretation phase usually lacking critical discussion of the methodological limitations. We analysed these aspects in depth, highlighting trends and tendencies. Conclusions: For each of the five remaining issues, we provided recommendations to be integrated by practitioners in their future LCA practice. We also developed a brief research agenda to address the future needs of LCA in the aquaculture sector. The first need is that emphasis should be put on the construction of aquaculture life-cycle inventory databases with a special need for developing countries and for post-farming processes. Additionally, method developers should develop and/or refine characterisation models for missing impact pathways to better cover all relevant impacts of seafood farming. 2021-03-23T01:08:52Z 2021-03-23T01:08:52Z 2019 Journal Article Bohnes, F. A. & Laurent, A. (2019). LCA of aquaculture systems : methodological issues and potential improvements. International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment, 24(2), 324-337. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11367-018-1517-x 0948-3349 0000-0002-1431-2684 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147098 10.1007/s11367-018-1517-x 2-s2.0-85052076252 2 24 324 337 en International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment © 2018 Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Chemical engineering
Aquafeed
Fish
spellingShingle Engineering::Chemical engineering
Aquafeed
Fish
Bohnes, Florence Alexia
Laurent, Alexis
LCA of aquaculture systems : methodological issues and potential improvements
description Purpose: The aquaculture sector is the fastest growing food production industry. Life-cycle assessment (LCA) can be a useful tool to assess its environmental impacts and ensure environmentally sustainable development. Years ago, critical reviews of LCA methodology have been conducted in that field to evaluate methodological practice. However, how effective were these reviews in improving LCA application? Are there any remaining issues that LCA practitioners should address in their practice? Methods: We tackle the above questions by critically reviewing all LCA cases applied to aquaculture and aquafeed production systems from a methodological point of view. A total of 65 studies were retrieved, thus tripling the scope of previous reviews. The studies were analysed following the main phases of the LCA methodology as described in the ISO standards, and the authors’ choices were extracted to identify potential trends in the LCA practice. Results and discussion: We identified five main methodological issues, which still pose challenges to LCA practitioners: (i) the functional unit not always reflecting the actual function of the system, (ii) the system boundary often being too restricted, (iii) the multi-functionality of processes too often being handled with economic allocation while more recommendable ways exist, (iv) the impact coverage not covering all environmental impacts relevant to aquaculture and (v) the interpretation phase usually lacking critical discussion of the methodological limitations. We analysed these aspects in depth, highlighting trends and tendencies. Conclusions: For each of the five remaining issues, we provided recommendations to be integrated by practitioners in their future LCA practice. We also developed a brief research agenda to address the future needs of LCA in the aquaculture sector. The first need is that emphasis should be put on the construction of aquaculture life-cycle inventory databases with a special need for developing countries and for post-farming processes. Additionally, method developers should develop and/or refine characterisation models for missing impact pathways to better cover all relevant impacts of seafood farming.
author2 School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
author_facet School of Chemical and Biomedical Engineering
Bohnes, Florence Alexia
Laurent, Alexis
format Article
author Bohnes, Florence Alexia
Laurent, Alexis
author_sort Bohnes, Florence Alexia
title LCA of aquaculture systems : methodological issues and potential improvements
title_short LCA of aquaculture systems : methodological issues and potential improvements
title_full LCA of aquaculture systems : methodological issues and potential improvements
title_fullStr LCA of aquaculture systems : methodological issues and potential improvements
title_full_unstemmed LCA of aquaculture systems : methodological issues and potential improvements
title_sort lca of aquaculture systems : methodological issues and potential improvements
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/147098
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