1,192 research outputs found
Comment calculer l’impact environnemental des énergies renouvelables ?
International audienceL'essor des renouvelables depuis le début des années 2000 devrait se poursuivre et s'amplifier dans les décennies à venir. Elles modifieront substantiellement le bouquet électrique du futur et on espère qu'elles limiteront les impacts environnementaux associés à la production d’électricité. Il est donc indispensable d'étudier l'empreinte environnementale des différentes filières de production
Evaluation of Environmental Accounting Methodologies for the assessment of global environmental impacts of traded goods and services.
Environmental accounting methods (EAM) are currently getting a strong interest from political entities, multinational corporations and citizens. EAMs are applied to a large range of socio-techno-economic activities for monitoring and managing their environmental performance over time: at macro-level to implement the environmental pillar of sustainable development, at meso-level for companies reporting and at micro-level for comparing the environmental footprints of products. IMEA project (IMports Environmental Accounting) is a SKEP-Era-net project (Scientific Knowledge for Environmental Protection) aiming at assessing the potential of EAMs to consider the challenges from globalization and environmental impacts linked to international trade. It was lead by MINES ParisTech/ARMINES with partners from the Institute of Social Ecology, Vienna, TNO, University of Oulu, and VITO, carried out between June 2008 and September 2009. The global aim of IMEA is to provide elements to answer the following question: "Does a given EAM meet societal expectations and how does it cope with new challenges from globalization?". IMEA has focused on the analysis of these challenges based on what EAMs "are", "how" they function and the use of their results in decision-making by the means of an archetypical workflow and an analytical framework. Based on this comprehensive analytical framework, the following EAMs. have been assessed in detail: Life Cycle Assessment, Economy-Wide Material Flow Analysis, Physical Input Output Tables, Environmentally Extended Input-Output Analysis, land use indicators like the Human Appropriation of Net Primary Production, the Actual Land Demand or the Ecological Footprint, and the Water Footprint
How to calculate the environmental impact of renewable energy
International audienceThe development of renewable energy since the early 2000s should continue and intensify in the coming years, changing significantly the electricity mix of the future while reducing the associated environmental impacts. It is therefore crucial to study the environmental impact of the different production sectors
Eco-design of buildings and comparison of materials
International audienceSustainable building integrates many issues, for instance: reducing energy consumption while keeping a high level of thermal comfort (in winter as well as in summer conditions), global environmental problems such as global warming or ozone depletion, indoor air quality issues, relevant material resource and waste management. Such issues are highly related to the choice of building materials. Eco-design requires therefore a relevant integrated assessment for the building materials not only at the process stage but over the whole life cycle of the buildings including the dominant use phase. Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) applied to buildings is enlarging the scope of material assessment. An innovative approach, EQUER (Evaluation of environmental quality of buildings), has been developed at Ecole des Mines for architects and consultants by linking a life cycle simulation tool with a building thermal simulation. The life cycle inventory database Ecoinvent is used to evaluate the environmental impacts of material fabrication and other processes (energy, transport,...). There are still many uncertainties and limits to the present state of the art of LCA. The uncertainties concern both the data (inventories) and impact indicators. For instance, the global warming potential (GWP) of other gases than CO2 is known with a high rate of uncertainty. Global indicators related to human or eco-toxicity are doubtful because the location of the emissions is not considered: in fact air pollution inside buildings do have a much larger effect than diluted external emissions and no indoor indicator has yet been elaborated. Also, the processes occurring at the end of the building life cycle are difficult to foresee, particularly because buildings are generally long lasting (though it may be assumed that mixing materials -concrete with polystyrene or wood for instance- will make the future waste management more difficult). Despite these limits, an attempt to convert these inventories data into a meaningful environmental profile is proposed in order to perform sensitivity studies for different building materials and derive environmental material performance according to a specific building use. We propose here a contribution concerning the evaluation of quantifiable environmental impacts of buildings for different material choices and end of life scenarios. The output of the software is an eco-profile including the different CML indicators (global warming, acidification, eutrophication potentials, smog, etc.), IMPACT2002+ indicators (human toxicity and ecosystem quality) plus some aggregated values like primary energy and water consumption, generation of radioactive and other waste. These indicators are given either for the different phases or for different alternatives or projects. The methodology is presented and illustrated by a comparative study on a single family house, concerning the comparison of three structural materials: concrete blocks, bricks, and timber. The results of this exercise are presented and its limits are discussed
Environmental assessment of electricity scenarios with Life Cycle Assessment
International audienceThe environmental impacts of existing electricity generation systems have already been assessed with Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) studies. However environmental impacts assessment of scenarios is very rarely evaluated through a life cycle perspective partly because of the complex parameters it involves, such as the temporal technology variation and the spatial dependency per country. Moreover some studies only analyze the effect of limited indicators variation. Considering these parameters is however crucial when steering and evaluating policy options with regards to the possible environmental consequences. The main objective of this paper is to present the methodology undertaken to perform an LCA for energy scenarios through the analysis of environmental impacts. Such methodology has been applied to a specific scenario, a "Renewable" scenario and results are analysed for Austria. This scenario has been developped within EnerGEO European project
Simplified prospective LCA models for residential PV installations based on SC-SI installed in Europe in 2050
International audienceThe prospective environmental impacts and electricity production capacity of residential PV systems need to be assessed for an efficient implementation planning while minimizing their environmental impacts. These impacts must be assessed using a life cycle approach, such as Life Cycle Assessment (LCA). This study is reporting the steps towards a simplified prospective model valid for residential PV systems based on single-crystalline silicon (sc-Si), installed in Europe around 2050. Prospective greenhouse gas (GHG) performance of PV installations are compared to current situation (2011-2013) accounting for technological improvements, future electricity mixes and module manufacturing origin. Recommendations to develop a simplified prospective LCA model are provided
Reproduction de l'ordre institutionnel face à l'incertitude
Comment certains systèmes se maintiennent-ils malgré un environnement incertain et changeant ? Cette question reste peu explorée dans la littérature, en particulier en ce qui concerne la compréhension des efforts des acteurs pour reproduire des croyances et des schémas de pensée. Dans cette perspective, les auteurs focalisent l'attention sur le discours des majors du disque dans la filière musicale et déterminent leur rôle dans la relative persistance de l'ordre existant.théorie néo-institutionnaliste, maintien institutionnel, analyse de discours, industrie musicale
Enhanced Structure Path Analysis: A New Method to Create Spatiotemporally Defined Life Cycle Inventory
Available on: http://milano.setac.eu/milano/scientific_programme/downloads/?contentid=429International audienceRefinements to the Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) methodology are required to obtain realistic and scientifically sound LCA results. We propose to contribute to this goal with the creation of spatiotemporally defined Life Cycle Inventory (LCI)
Challenges of Electricity Production Scenarios Modelling for Life Cycle Assessment of Environmental Impacts
International audienceThis communication presents a first attempt at making a life cycle assessment of prospective electricity production scenarios which were designed in the EnerGEO project. We start by a basic review of system (in this case, scenario) modelling expectations in today's LCA study. We then review some of the challenges of implementation due to the lack of detailed description of present and future electricity production systems. The importance of a detailed description is then shown with an evaluation of uncertainty of life cycle impact assessment results for three scenarios of German electricity production in 2030. The significant uncertainties we found, prevent us from detecting a relevant trend or making any comparison between the three chosen scenarios. We finally come to the conclusion that the LCA methodology will become relevant for the environmental assessment of electricity production scenarios when many more detailed information are accounted to describe future technologies, structures and sources of energy
Female Labor Supply and Child Care in France
We use French household data to estimate a structural model of female labor supply and use of paid child care outside the home. Child care costs are found to have little impact on the labor market participation decision of mothers. The model is used to study various policy issues. The influence of the current tax credit on child care expenditures on the mothers’ labor supply is weak. Suppressing the APE (Parental Allowance for the Education) would cause the female participation rate in our sample to rise by 4 points and the proportion of mothers using paid care to rise by 2 points. The responses of women to policy changes are very heterogenous. Macroeconomic changes in female labor supply are equally due to switches between non-participation and participation and switches between working hours by working women.female labor supply, child care, welfare participation, fiscal policy
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