SPOTLIGHTING SOLUTIONS BACKED BY SCIENCE
Uncovering impact with the LCA methodology
Taking a holistic approach, the LCA approach measures the entire life cycle of a product or service from raw material extraction, processing, and manufacturing to distribution, use, repair, maintenance, disposal and recycling. It’s for this reason that the United Nations and European Commission have acknowledged the efficiency and importance of the life cycle assessment methodology, and as such why this method is standardised into ISO 14040/44.
Assessed by independent institutes
Each solution undergoes a dual evaluation process, with one institute conducting the LCA assessment and the other engaging in a thorough peer review of the results. This approach guarantees the delivery of comprehensive and credible information concerning the impacts generated by a product or service over its entire lifespan. To uphold the integrity of the assessment, all data will be treated as confidential in accordance with a confidentiality and IP agreement.
Benchmarking against the Business As Usual
The proposed solution’s environmental performance is compared to the Business as Usual (BAU).
The BAU, defined by various parameters specific to the candidate solution, represents the most widely used product or service on the market within the solution’s category at the time of verification. The most common way to determine the business-as-usual is the most sold product at this time, but this varies per solution.
Verification is granted when the comparative LCA analysis reveals a reduction in a number of environmental indicators, which serve as the primary criteria to assess if the submitted solution has fewer impacts than the mainstream alternative.
These indicators address the two most crucial challenges: climate change and loss of biodiversity. To meet verification criteria, a solution should exhibit improvement in at least five of the nine selected light-blue indicators, along with the dark-blue indicator, defined as the EcoPoint. This EcoPoint provides an aggregated result consisting of three distinct impact categories: human health, ecosystem quality, and resources.
Driven by the vision of UN SDGs
SDG 9 concentrates on building resilient infrastructure, promoting inclusive and sustainable industrialisation, and fostering innovation, while SDG 12 focuses on ensuring sustainable consumption and production patterns. SDG 14 centres around the conservation and positive use of the oceans, seas and marine resources for sustainable development.