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Frequently Asked Questions

A systematic analysis methodology used to evaluate the environmental impacts of a product or service throughout its entire life cycle, from raw material extraction to disposal.
The compilation and quantification of inputs and outputs of materials, energy, and waste associated with a product or service throughout its life cycle.
The phase of LCA that evaluates the potential environmental impacts of aproduct or service based on the life cycle inventory data.
A method for evaluating the total cost of ownership of a product or service over its entire life cycle, including acquisition, operation, maintenance, and disposal costs.
A standardized document that communicates transparent and comparable information about the environmental performance of a product or service based on its life cycle assessment.
The quantified performance or function of a product or service that serves as a reference for conducting a life cycle assessment
The limits set for the analysis, defining what processes and impacts are included in the life cycle assessment of a product or service.
A specific environmental issue, such as global warming potential or eutrophication, evaluated in a life cycle impact assessment.
Cradle-to-Grave: A life cycle assessment approach that considers all stages of a product or service, from raw material extraction to end-of-life disposal. Cradle-to-Gate: A life cycle assessment approach that considers all stages of a product or service up to the point of leaving the manufacturing facility.
The Environmental Footprint methodology, which stands for “ReCiPe: a Life Cycle Impact Assessment method which comprises several impact categories.”
Midpoint Impact: An intermediate stage in LCIA that measures potential environmental impacts before translating them into more endpoint impact categories. Endpoint Impact: The final stage in LCIA where potential environmental impacts are translated into broader endpoints, such as human health, ecosystem quality, or resource depletion