Towards sustainable renewable energy production: Developing a Life Cycle Impact Assessment framework for biodiversity impacts
Informations
- Funding country
Norway
- Acronym
- -
- URL
- -
- Start date
- 1/1/2015
- End date
- 12/31/2020
- Budget
- 999,004 EUR
Fundings
Name | Role | Start | End | Amount |
---|---|---|---|---|
ENERGIX - Large-scale programme on energy | Grant | - | - | 999,003 EUR |
Abstract
Products (for example, a computer or a T-shirt) and processes (e.g. electricity generation) generate a number of environmental impacts during their life cycle; during their construction or manufacturing, their use, as well as their end-of-life handling. It is the ambition of Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) to capture and quantify all of these impacts, with respect to damages on human health, ecosystems and natural resources. LCA is a tool that is widely used in practice for comparing the environmental damages of different alternatives (e.g. different products or different scenarios). Is it for example in a specific location more environmentally friendly to use electric or conventional cars? The answer depends on the available energy mix and the impacts that are taken into account. Even though LCA studies aim to have comprehensive impact quantifications, current LCA methodologies are incomplete, especially regarding impacts on ecosystems and biodiversity. It is for instance not possible to quantify impacts on biodiversity from renewable energy sources, such as wind- and hydropower. At the same time, it is known that, for example, reduction in flow magnitudes and the timing of flows (for hydropower), or collision with rotor blades (wind power) do have an impact on the present biodiversity and ecosystem. We have shown this to be true for both hydropower and wind power (Gracey and Verones, 2016;Laranjeiro et al. 2018). It is the aim of our project to develop methodologies that allow quantifying impacts on biodiversity from (1) onshore wind power, and (2) hydropower. Currently we are modelling the impact from habitat loss from wind power plants on birds in Norway and globally. For this we create habitat suitability maps for the species, as well as information on the location of wind power plants. This will allow us to quantify the potential loss in habitat, as well as the collision risk of different species. We have quantified the loss of land due to reservoir impoundment in Norway (Dorber et al. 2018) and work on methodologies to quantify impacts from changing water flows on aquatic biodiversity (Dorber et al. 2019a). We expanded currently existing land use change models from LCA to also include land transformation to reservoir areas (i.e. flooding of land, Dorber et al 2018 and Dorber et al. 2019b) and are currently applying our models to more than 2000 planned hydropower dams worldwide. While all of them have been deemed economically viable, the associated impacts on biodiversity (from land transformation, evaporative water losses and greenhouse gas creation in reservoirs) are substantially different from each other. A few of the dams show more than 50% of the total biodiversity impacts. From a sustainability perspective with respect to the biodiversity angle, these dams would therefore likely not be sustainable.