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Measuring Impacts on the Environment. Biologically Inspired Design 15 October 2009 Craig Tovey. Main Conceptual Points. Define System Boundaries Environmental Impact s , in the plural. Measurement is multidimensional Comparison is usually much easier than an evaluation from scratch
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Measuring Impacts on the Environment Biologically Inspired Design 15 October 2009 Craig Tovey
Main Conceptual Points • Define System Boundaries • Environmental Impacts, in the plural. Measurement is multidimensional • Comparison is usually much easier than an evaluation from scratch • Evaluate the product’s entire lifecycle
Main Factual Points • Waste • Carbon Dioxide • Water • Habitat or Green Space • Toxins • Use of non-renewable resources
System Boundaries Only measure what crosses system boundaries • It is never easy to define the system • Example: use wood in Georgia Transport wood by truck • Example: use electricity in Georgia Burn coal
Impact is Multidimensional • Dimension: something you can measure • What is better, paper or plastic? • What is better, a hybrid or gasoline car?
Impact is Multidimensional • Dimension: something you can measure • What is better, paper or plastic? I don’t know • What is better, a hybrid or gasoline car? I don’t know
Impact is Multidimensional • Dimension: something you can measure • What is better, paper or plastic? I don’t know • What is better, a hybrid or gasoline car? I don’t know But I can tell you the tradeoffs
Waste • Measure by weight (e.g. kg) • Stuff that goes into landfills • Does not include toxic waste
Carbon Dioxide • Global Warming • Greenhouse Gases • Carbon Dioxide Equivalents, in kg or lb
Water • Gallons of clean water used
Greenspace • Acres or km^2 of forest, jungle, arable land destroyed • Habitat destruction • Endangered species are markers for habitats
Toxins • Crude measure in kg • Tables of toxicity sometimes available but unclear how to use e.g. plutonium.
Nonrenewable Resources • Oil • Coal • Natural Gas • Metals and metal-bearing minerals
Comparison • x-x = 0 even if you don’t know x. • Often much easier • Be consistent about system boundaries • FUNCTION, not activity car-years, not cars; warmth not BTUs.
Lifecycle Analysis • Manufacture • Transportation and Storage • Use • End-of-Life. Disassemble, possibly recycle • Examples: decommission nuclear reactor; dispose of battery