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Life-cycle assessment (LCA)

Life-cycle assessment (LCA) is a standardized method for measuring the environmental impacts of a product, service, or system across its entire life cycle—from raw material extraction and manufacturing through distribution, use, and end-of-life. It translates real inputs and outputs (materials, energy, transport, emissions, waste) into impact indicators such as climate change (CO₂e), resource use, and pollution, enabling consistent comparison and improvement.

What Is Life-cycle Assessment?

A life-cycle assessment evaluates environmental performance using a structured framework commonly aligned with ISO 14040 and ISO 14044. The key principle is transparency: the study must clearly define what is included, how impacts are calculated, and what assumptions were made.
LCA is used to:
– Identify environmental hotspots in products and supply chains
– Compare design alternatives and sourcing options
– Support sustainability reporting and credible product claims
– Provide a basis for product carbon footprint (PCF) and EPD development

Why LCA Matters for EV Charging Products and Projects

For EV charging hardware and infrastructure, LCA helps quantify and reduce impacts from:
– Metals and electronics in chargers (aluminum, steel, copper, PCBs)
– Manufacturing energy and process losses
– Packaging materials and logistics
– Installation works (cabling, civil works, switchgear)
– Maintenance and spare parts over the product lifetime
– End-of-life treatment, recycling, and material recovery
This is increasingly relevant in public procurement, corporate ESG programs, and customer-driven reporting requirements.

The 4 Phases of an LCA Study

A complete LCA typically follows four linked phases:
Goal and scope definition: purpose, audience, functional unit, system boundary, assumptions
Life-cycle inventory (LCI): quantified input/output data collection (materials, energy, transport, emissions)
Life-cycle impact assessment (LCIA): conversion of inventory flows into impact categories (e.g., CO₂e)
Interpretation: conclusions, limitations, sensitivity checks, and improvement actions

Key Concepts You Must Define

LCA results are only meaningful when these elements are explicit:
Functional unit: the measurable function provided (e.g., “one EV charger operated for X years”)
Reference flow: the amount of product needed to deliver the functional unit
System boundary: what life-cycle stages are included and excluded
Cut-off criteria: rules for omitting minor inputs
Allocation: how shared processes are split between co-products
Data quality: time, geography, and technology representativeness

Common System Boundaries

Typical boundary choices include:
Cradle-to-gate: raw materials through manufacturing output
Gate-to-gate: a single production stage only
Cradle-to-grave: full life cycle including use and end-of-life
Cradle-to-cradle: includes recycling loops and recovery credits
Boundary selection should match the decision you are trying to support and the reporting rules you must follow.

What Data Is Used in an LCA?

The inventory stage (LCI) usually includes:
– Bill of materials and material masses
– Electricity and fuels used in manufacturing and testing
– Transport routes, distances, and modes (road/sea/air)
– Packaging composition and waste streams
– Maintenance parts and service logistics (if in scope)
– End-of-life assumptions (recycling rates, disposal routes)

Impact Categories and Reporting

Depending on the chosen method, LCA can report multiple impact indicators, such as:
Climate change (CO₂e)
– Resource use (fossil, minerals, metals)
– Acidification and eutrophication
– Particulate matter formation
– Water use indicators
A product carbon footprint (PCF) is often treated as the climate-change-only subset of LCA.

LCA vs Product Carbon Footprint

Key difference:
LCA can cover many environmental impact categories
PCF focuses only on greenhouse gas emissions expressed as CO₂e, often aligned with ISO 14067
In many organizations, PCF is calculated using an LCA-style inventory and method, but with a single impact category.

How LCA Drives Eco-design Improvements

LCA is most useful when it leads to clear decisions:
– Reducing high-impact materials or increasing recycled content
– Optimizing packaging and palletization
– Improving manufacturing energy efficiency or sourcing renewable electricity
– Reducing transport impacts by optimizing routes and modes
– Designing for repairability, modular replacement, and longer service life

Product Carbon Footprint (PCF)
ISO 14040
ISO 14044
ISO 14067
Environmental Product Declaration (EPD)
Product Environmental Footprint (PEF)
Functional Unit
System Boundary
Life-cycle Inventory (LCI)
Life-cycle Impact Assessment (LCIA)
Allocation
Hotspot Analysis