PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Life cycle assessment can help with the transition to the circular economy

Life cycle assessment can help with the transition to the circular economy
2023-04-11
(Press-News.org) According to Bening Mayanti's doctoral dissertation at the University of Vaasa, the use of life cycle assessment combined with economic models can help companies to take steps toward the circular economy.

– We often hear claims about some solutions being circular, sustainable, or green. Instead of blindly accepting those claims, we should ask justifications, ‘How so?’ says Mayanti, who publicly defended her dissertation on Wednesday, 5 April.

Before deciding on circular economy solutions and building supply chains, it is worth doing a careful analysis. According to Mayanti, a life cycle assessment is a good method for this. It allows organisations to measure the environmental impact of their products and services over their entire life cycle, investigate environmental hotspots, compare different strategies and ensure that the decision benefits the environment.

In addition to the environmental impacts, it is also important to bear in mind that circular solutions have economic impacts. In her doctoral research, Mayanti has combined two different tools: life cycle assessment, which measures environmental impacts, with life cycle costing, which assesses the economic impact of a product or service over its life cycle. She has used this combined tool for the case studies in her dissertation.

Recycling agricultural plastic waste would benefit both the environment and finances Finnish farms produce 12,000 tons of plastic waste annually, of which approximately half is bale wrap. Currently, the majority of this waste ends up in landfills. Mayanti conducted a case study on the recycling of agricultural plastic waste, involving 179 farms in southern Finland. In one scenario, bale wrap and other agricultural plastics were collected once a year, and in another scenario, twice a year.

Mayanti found that recycling agricultural plastic waste can reduce costs and carbon footprint compared to producing virgin material. The study showed that collecting agricultural plastic waste once a year was cheaper than collecting the waste twice a year. On the other hand, collecting waste twice a year provided higher environmental benefits, including improvement on the climate change impact. 

– There is a trade-off between the economic and environmental aspects. Collecting the bale wrap plastic twice a year will inflate the collection cost while providing more environmental benefits since the plastic waste is less polluted and weathered. On the other hand, the yearly collection is cheaper, but plastic may be more worn-off, says Mayanti.

Separate collection of bio-waste can be environmentally and economically viable In addition to agricultural plastic waste recycling, Mayanti studied a separate collection of biowaste, optimisation of waste-to-energy plants, and burden-sharing in waste management systems.

The recent Finnish legislation requires a minimum of five housings for separate biowaste collection to be arranged.  Compared to ten housings in the old legislation, it creates a new cluster for source-separated biowaste collection. 

A real case with over 2200 households in Kauhajoki municipality in Finland showed that the recent legislation led to overall higher economic benefits and lower environmental damage costs compared with the old legislation. Although collection costs increased, source-separated biowaste will be treated in a biogas plant which bears lower costs than an incinerator plant.

Mayanti's research also examined waste-to-energy incineration plants. By adjusting operational parameters such as temperature or pressure, it was possible to improve system efficiency and environmental and economic performance.

Even though the study showed the overall economic benefits, the financial burden among the stakeholders within waste management is imbalanced. In the case of agricultural plastic waste recycling and source separated biowaste, collection costs that can be expensive should be borne by the farmers and residents.

– In the case of agricultural plastic waste recycling, some form of subsidy may be needed. Alternatively, Finland can include agricultural plastic waste into an extended producer responsibility scheme and apply national collecting schemes, says Mayanti.

Doctoral dissertation Mayanti, Bening (2023) Toward circularity: lifecycle-based approach in waste management. Acta Wasaensia 505. Doctoral dissertation. Vaasan yliopisto / University of Vaasa.

Publication pdf

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Life cycle assessment can help with the transition to the circular economy

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

From waste to wonder: unlocking nature’s biochemical recycling secrets

2023-04-11
A new perspective published in the journal Nature Chemical Biology uncovers a previously unknown biochemical recycling process in animals. The authors review a flurry of recent papers demonstrating that animals extensively recycle biochemical waste to produce novel chemicals that play key roles in biology, from regulating behavior to development and aging. These studies show that the genes previously thought to code for carboxylesterases, enzymes that hydrolyze esters, actually play a pivotal role in assembling a wide range of new metabolites from building blocks generally considered “cellular waste.” Surprisingly, the so-called carboxylesterases were found to contribute ...

Yossi Sheffi on AI and the future of the supply chain

Yossi Sheffi on AI and the future of the supply chain
2023-04-11
Global supply chains are immense feats of technological and organizational sophistication. They are also, as the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic showed, vulnerable to unexpected developments. Will that change as artificial intelligence becomes a bigger part of supply chains? And what will happen to workers in the process?  MIT Professor Yossi Sheffi explores these topics in a new book, “The Magic Conveyor Belt: AI, Supply Chains, and the Future of Work,” published by MIT’s CTL Media. Sheffi, the Elisha Gray II Professor of Engineering ...

Tax credit tool tracks EV savings

Tax credit tool tracks EV savings
2023-04-11
Oak Ridge National Laboratory researchers have developed an online resource to help consumers understand the electric vehicle tax credits available through the Inflation Reduction Act. Located on the Department of Energy’s fueleconomy.gov website, the tool shows eligible vehicle models along with the corresponding federal tax credit. The new clean vehicle tax credit is for purchases of all-electric, plug-in hybrid electric and fuel cell electric vehicles in 2023 and beyond. A separate credit is available for eligible used vehicles purchased in 2023 or after. Information on credits for vehicles purchased before ...

Knockout of AMD-associated gene POLDIP2 reduces mitochondrial superoxide in retinal cells

Knockout of AMD-associated gene POLDIP2 reduces mitochondrial superoxide in retinal cells
2023-04-11
“To our knowledge, this is the first functional study of POLDIP2 in retinal cells to understand its potential role in AMD.” BUFFALO, NY- April 11, 2023 – A new research paper was published in Aging (listed by MEDLINE/PubMed as "Aging (Albany NY)" and "Aging-US" by Web of Science) Volume 15, Issue 6, entitled, “Knockout of AMD-associated gene POLDIP2 reduces mitochondrial superoxide in human retinal pigment epithelial cells.” Genetic and epidemiologic studies have significantly advanced our ...

New approach targets norovirus, world’s leading cause of foodborne infection

New approach targets norovirus, world’s leading cause of foodborne infection
2023-04-11
Every year, norovirus causes hundreds of millions of cases of food poisoning — and the deaths of at least 50,000 children — yet there exists no real way to control it. The virus has proven exceptionally difficult to study in the lab, and scientists have struggled to develop effective vaccines and drugs. A new study at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis describes a creative way to make a vaccine against norovirus by piggybacking on the highly effective vaccines for rotavirus, an unrelated virus that also causes diarrhea. The ...

Electrification push will have enormous impacts on critical metals supply chain

2023-04-11
ITHACA, N.Y. – The demand for battery-grade lithium, nickel, cobalt, manganese and platinum will climb steeply as vehicle electrification speeds up and nations work to reduce greenhouse gas emissions through mid-century. This surge in demand will also create a variety of economic and supply-chain problems, according to new Cornell University research published in Nature Communications. In the new paper, senior author Fengqi You, professor in energy systems engineering, and his colleagues examined 48 countries that are committed to playing a strong role in electrifying transportation, including the U.S., China and India. Under ...

Takeda licenses small molecule developed by Krembil Brain Institute researchers, targeting tau protein implicated in Alzheimer’s disease

2023-04-11
As announced today in a press release by biotechnology company Treventis, global pharmaceutical company Takeda has agreed to exclusively license a group of small molecules that target tau – a protein in which misfolding and aggregation are believed to be a cause of Alzheimer’s disease. The molecules were developed by the team at Treventis, building upon the Alzheimer’s & neurodegenerative research expertise of Dr. Donald Weaver’s lab at UHN.  “There are currently no effective drugs out there that target tau in the brain,” says Dr. Donald Weaver, Senior ...

Mount Sinai researchers discover novel receptors for SARS-CoV-2 and their age-dependent expression, providing new insights for public health

2023-04-11
New York, NY (April 11, 2023) – A study led by Mount Sinai researchers Dr. Bin Zhang, the Willard T.C. Johnson Research Professor of Neurogenetics, and Dr. Christian Forst, an Associate Professor in the Department of Genetics and Genomic Sciences, have identified potential novel receptors for SARS-CoV-2 and unveiled their tissue-specific and age-dependent expression. The findings were published on March 23 in the Federation of European Biochemical Societies Letters. The study's multiscale network analysis suggests that SARS-CoV-2 utilizes multiple novel receptors, such as the TYOBP receptor CD300e, to facilitate ...

Perfume component helps lure male moth pests

Perfume component helps lure male moth pests
2023-04-11
North Carolina State University researchers have shown that adding a small amount of a chemical used in perfumes – nonanal – to a two-chemical combination of other sex pheromones helped increase the cocktail’s effectiveness in mimicking female fall armyworm “come hither” calls to males.  The findings could eventually help farmers better detect, monitor and control fall armyworm populations, which negatively affect some 350 plant species – including crops like corn and cotton as well as turfgrass and other cultivated grasses.  “Nonanal is emitted ...

Genomic surveillance identifies global strain of emerging wheat disease fungus

Genomic surveillance identifies global strain of emerging wheat disease fungus
2023-04-11
Pests and diseases may reduce global wheat yields by over 20%. A study published April 11th in the open access journal PLOS Biology by Sergio Latorre at University College London, UK and colleagues suggest that genomic surveillance may be an effective disease management tool with the ability to trace lineages of emerging crop diseases, and to identify genetic traits for breeding disease-resistant lines. Wheat crops across the globe are threatened by wheat blast, an emerging fungal disease. However, disease-management strategies have been unsuccessful. In order to better understand ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

SfN announces Early Career Policy Ambassadors Class of 2026

Spiritual practices strongly associated with reduced risk for hazardous alcohol and drug use

Novel vaccine protects against C. diff disease and recurrence

An “electrical” circadian clock balances growth between shoots and roots

Largest study of rare skin cancer in Mexican patients shows its more complex than previously thought

Colonists dredged away Sydney’s natural oyster reefs. Now science knows how best to restore them.

Joint and independent associations of gestational diabetes and depression with childhood obesity

Spirituality and harmful or hazardous alcohol and other drug use

New plastic material could solve energy storage challenge, researchers report

Mapping protein production in brain cells yields new insights for brain disease

Exposing a hidden anchor for HIV replication

Can Europe be climate-neutral by 2050? New monitor tracks the pace of the energy transition

Major heart attack study reveals ‘survival paradox’: Frail men at higher risk of death than women despite better treatment

Medicare patients get different stroke care depending on plan, analysis reveals

Polyploidy-induced senescence may drive aging, tissue repair, and cancer risk

Study shows that treating patients with lifestyle medicine may help reduce clinician burnout

Experimental and numerical framework for acoustic streaming prediction in mid-air phased arrays

Ancestral motif enables broad DNA binding by NIN, a master regulator of rhizobial symbiosis

Macrophage immune cells need constant reminders to retain memories of prior infections

Ultra-endurance running may accelerate aging and breakdown of red blood cells

Ancient mind-body practice proven to lower blood pressure in clinical trial

SwRI to create advanced Product Lifecycle Management system for the Air Force

Natural selection operates on multiple levels, comprehensive review of scientific studies shows

Developing a national research program on liquid metals for fusion

AI-powered ECG could help guide lifelong heart monitoring for patients with repaired tetralogy of fallot

Global shark bites return to average in 2025, with a smaller proportion in the United States

Millions are unaware of heart risks that don’t start in the heart

What freezing plants in blocks of ice can tell us about the future of Svalbard’s plant communities

A new vascularized tissueoid-on-a-chip model for liver regeneration and transplant rejection

Augmented reality menus may help restaurants attract more customers, improve brand perceptions

[Press-News.org] Life cycle assessment can help with the transition to the circular economy