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The right tools are key to ensure investment decisions that reduce global emissions. This is shown by Helena Nydahl, Department of Applied Physics and Electronics, in her thesis Communication of Life Cycle Assessment Results – Life Cycle Key Performance Indicators, which will be defended on October 10 at Umeå University, Sweden.
“Prominent climate scientists argue that global emissions must reach zero by 2050 to avoid permanently damaging our possibilities on earth. But how can you know whether your choices contribute positively or negatively to the climate? One important tool for calculating a product’s climate impact is life cycle assessment” says Helena Nydahl.
How big is the climate impact of this particular product? Are there steps in the manufacturing process of the product that have a particularly large carbon footprint? Are there equivalent products with a lower carbon footprint? These are the kinds of questions that a life cycle assessment can answer.
“More and more people in both the private and public sectors are starting to use life cycle assessment as a decision-making tool. This is a positive development, but for life cycle assessment to become a tool that is widely used by all types of decision-makers, perhaps even by the average person, the understanding and interpretation of the assessment results is crucial. In order to make choices that reduce global emissions, you need to understand the results of a life cycle assessment. However, at present that can be difficult if you are not an expert” says Helena Nydahl.
Research in the area of understanding and interpreting life cycle assessment results is limited. At the same time economic sustainability is often highly valued by decision-makers. Therefore, Helena Nydahl’s thesis aims to contribute to the development of guidelines for interpreting life cycle assessment results, by introducing a communication approach for life cycle assessment results that is consistent with the economically driven nature of decision makers.
In her thesis, she presents key figures that quantify life cycle economic and environmental impacts in a way that that is inspired by traditional economic key figures of decision makers through, for example, social cost of carbon.
“Hopefully such approach can increase the use of life cycle assessment as a tool in decision-making and at the same time increase the understanding of the results that the tool provides” says Helena Nydahl.
Helena Nydahl’s doctoral project has been financed by The Industrial Doctoral School at Umeå University and the external partner AB Bostaden.
About the Industrial Doctoral School
The Industrial Doctoral School is an inter-faculty research school that is based on collaboration between Umeå University and an organisation or a company. IDS aims to promote collaboration in order to strengthen research and development, increase the doctoral students’ employability, independence and innovative capacity, and increase knowledge and innovation in society.
For more information, please contact:
Helena Nydahl, doctoral student, Department of Applied Physics and Electronics, Umeå University
Phone: +46 70 3721221
Email: helena.nydahl@gmail.com
About the dissertation
On Monday October 10, Helena Nydahl, Department of Applied Physics and Electronics at Umeå University, will defend her thesis titled Communication of Life Cycle Assessment Results – Life Cycle Key Performance Indicators. Swedish title: Nyckeltal för kommunikation av livscykelanalysresultat. The dissertation will take place at 13.00 in Triple Helix, University Management Building. The faculty opponent is adjunct professor Åsa Wahlström, Department of Building and Environmental Technology, Lund University, Sweden.
http://umu.diva-portal.org/smash/record.jsf?pid=diva2%3A1693808&dswid=239
https://www.umu.se/en/industrialdoctoralschool
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