What is a carbon footprint?
The amount of CO2 emissions directly or indirectly caused by an activity or over the life cycle of a product. Other GHGs are included as CO2 equivalents (e.g., CH4, N2O, SF6).
What is the purpose of a carbon footprint analysis?
Tool for assessing climate impact of:
Product supply/consumption
Individual services
Organizational/state services
Supports climate protection targets.
Part of life cycle assessment (LCA).
What is the Greenhouse Gas Protocol?
Framework for measuring and managing GHG emissions from private and public entities, setting a product life cycle standard for GHG reporting.
What does ISO 14064 encompass?
Three parts:
Part 1: GHG inventory at company level.
Part 2: GHG monitoring/reporting at project level.
Part 3: Guidelines for GHG information validation and certification.
What is the main principle of ISO 14067?
Provides guidelines for quantifying/reporting carbon footprints of products (CFP), aligned with LCA standards (ISO 14040, ISO 14044).
What should a CFP study include?
Phases:
Goal and scope definition
Life cycle inventory
Life cycle impact assessment
Life cycle interpretation
Life cycle stages (e.g., raw material acquisition, production, usage, end-of-life).
What is a functional unit in LCA?
A quantified description of the performance of a product system for use as a reference (e.g., one cup of coffee with defined specifications).
Why consider a 10-year period for GHG emissions in CFP?
To avoid complexity in data collection/reporting, ensuring consistency over time.
What are the ISO 14064-1 principles?
Relevance, completeness, consistency, accuracy, transparency.
What types of GHG emissions should organizations report according to ISO 14064-1?
Direct emissions (by each GHG), removals, energy indirect emissions, and other indirect emissions.
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