Published: CABEQ 29 (2) (2015) 299-305
Paper type: Review
M. Narodoslawsky, K. Shazad, R. Kollmann and H. Schnitzer
Abstract
A major reason for the call to increasingly switch towards polymers based on renewable
resources is their presumed advantage regarding ecological performance compared
to fossil competitors. Usually, this argument is based on the assumption that products
based on renewable sources hold an inherent ecological advantage over products
derived from other sources, in particular fossil sources. This claim however must be
substantiated by looking into the ecological impacts accrued by the production of a material
along the whole life cycle, from the raw material generation to the provision of the
final product. Only thorough life cycle assessments (LCA) can provide solid, comprehensive and quantifiable information about the ecological performance of products, and thus answer the question of any superiority of bio-polymers regarding their environmental impacts.
The paper will review the ongoing discourse about environmental performance of
PHA in literature. It will also analyse the most important factors that decide about the
ecological performance of PHA derived from different raw materials as well as the potential for improvement that is still available for PHA production.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
Keywords
LCA of bio-polymers, ecological performance of PHA, LCA applied to process development