An LCA study of an electricity coal supply chain

<p><strong>Purpose:</strong> The aim of this paper is to provide methods to find the emission source and estimate the amount of waste gas emissions in the electricity coal supply chain, establish the model of the environmental impact (burden) in the electricity coal supply chain, d...

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Main Authors: Chao Wang, Dong Mu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: OmniaScience 2014-01-01
Series:Journal of Industrial Engineering and Management
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jiem.org/index.php/jiem/article/view/1053
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author Chao Wang
Dong Mu
author_facet Chao Wang
Dong Mu
author_sort Chao Wang
collection DOAJ
description <p><strong>Purpose:</strong> The aim of this paper is to provide methods to find the emission source and estimate the amount of waste gas emissions in the electricity coal supply chain, establish the model of the environmental impact (burden) in the electricity coal supply chain, detect the critical factor which causes significant environmental impact, and then identify the key control direction and reduce amount of environmental pollution in the electricity coal supply chain.</p> <p><strong>Design/methodology/approach:</strong> In this context, life cycle inventory and life cycle assessment of China’s electricity coal were established in three difference stages: coal mining, coal transportation, and coal burning. Then the outcomes were analyzed with the aim to reduce waste gases emissions’ environmental impact in the electricity coal supply chain from the perspective of sensitivity analysis.</p> <p><strong>Findings:</strong> The results and conclusion are as follow: (1) In terms of total waste gas emissions in electricity coal supply chain, CO<sub>2</sub> is emitted in the greatest quantity, accounting for 98-99 wt% of the total waste gas emissions. The vast majority of the CO<sub>2</sub>, greater than 93%, is emitted from the power plant when the coal is combusted. (2) Other than CO<sub>2</sub>, the main waste gas is CH<sub>4</sub>, SO<sub>2</sub> and so on. CH<sub>4</sub> is mainly emitted from Coal Bed Methane (CBM), so the option is to consider capturing some of the CH4 from underground mines for an alternative use. SO<sub>2</sub> is mainly emitted from power plant when the coal is combusted. (3) The environmental burden of coal burning subsystem is greatest, followed by the coal mining subsystem, and finally the coal transportation subsystem. Improving the coal-burning efficiency of coal-fired power plant in electricity coal supply chain is the most effective way to reduce the environmental impact of waste gas emissions. (4) Of the three subsystems examined (coal mining, coal transportation, and coal burning), transportation requires the fewest resources and has the lowest waste gas emissions. However, the energy consumption for this subsystem is significant (excluding the mine mouth case), and transportation distance is found to have a substantial effect on the oil consumption and non-coal energy consumption. (5) In electricity coal supply chain, the biggest environmental impact of waste gas emissions is GWP, followed by EP, AP, POCP and ODP, and regional impact is greater than the global impact.</p> <p><strong>Practical implications:</strong> The model and methodology established in this paper could be used for environmental impact assessment of waste gas emissions in electricity coal supply chain and sensitivity analysis in China, and it could supply reference and example for similar researches. The data information on life cycle inventory, impact assessment and sensitivity analysis could supply theory and data reference for waste gas emissions control in electricity coal supply chain.</p> <p><strong>Originality/value:</strong> To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time to study the environmental influence of electricity coal supply chain by employing a LCA approach from life cycle of electricity coal.</p>
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spelling doaj.art-ac973ee62c3541c3b3892540f08931682022-12-21T22:30:42ZengOmniaScienceJournal of Industrial Engineering and Management2013-84232013-09532014-01-017131133510.3926/jiem.1053250An LCA study of an electricity coal supply chainChao Wang0Dong Mu1Beijing Jiaotong UniversityBeijing Jiaotong University<p><strong>Purpose:</strong> The aim of this paper is to provide methods to find the emission source and estimate the amount of waste gas emissions in the electricity coal supply chain, establish the model of the environmental impact (burden) in the electricity coal supply chain, detect the critical factor which causes significant environmental impact, and then identify the key control direction and reduce amount of environmental pollution in the electricity coal supply chain.</p> <p><strong>Design/methodology/approach:</strong> In this context, life cycle inventory and life cycle assessment of China’s electricity coal were established in three difference stages: coal mining, coal transportation, and coal burning. Then the outcomes were analyzed with the aim to reduce waste gases emissions’ environmental impact in the electricity coal supply chain from the perspective of sensitivity analysis.</p> <p><strong>Findings:</strong> The results and conclusion are as follow: (1) In terms of total waste gas emissions in electricity coal supply chain, CO<sub>2</sub> is emitted in the greatest quantity, accounting for 98-99 wt% of the total waste gas emissions. The vast majority of the CO<sub>2</sub>, greater than 93%, is emitted from the power plant when the coal is combusted. (2) Other than CO<sub>2</sub>, the main waste gas is CH<sub>4</sub>, SO<sub>2</sub> and so on. CH<sub>4</sub> is mainly emitted from Coal Bed Methane (CBM), so the option is to consider capturing some of the CH4 from underground mines for an alternative use. SO<sub>2</sub> is mainly emitted from power plant when the coal is combusted. (3) The environmental burden of coal burning subsystem is greatest, followed by the coal mining subsystem, and finally the coal transportation subsystem. Improving the coal-burning efficiency of coal-fired power plant in electricity coal supply chain is the most effective way to reduce the environmental impact of waste gas emissions. (4) Of the three subsystems examined (coal mining, coal transportation, and coal burning), transportation requires the fewest resources and has the lowest waste gas emissions. However, the energy consumption for this subsystem is significant (excluding the mine mouth case), and transportation distance is found to have a substantial effect on the oil consumption and non-coal energy consumption. (5) In electricity coal supply chain, the biggest environmental impact of waste gas emissions is GWP, followed by EP, AP, POCP and ODP, and regional impact is greater than the global impact.</p> <p><strong>Practical implications:</strong> The model and methodology established in this paper could be used for environmental impact assessment of waste gas emissions in electricity coal supply chain and sensitivity analysis in China, and it could supply reference and example for similar researches. The data information on life cycle inventory, impact assessment and sensitivity analysis could supply theory and data reference for waste gas emissions control in electricity coal supply chain.</p> <p><strong>Originality/value:</strong> To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time to study the environmental influence of electricity coal supply chain by employing a LCA approach from life cycle of electricity coal.</p>http://www.jiem.org/index.php/jiem/article/view/1053life cycle assessmentelectricity coal supply chainsensitivity analysis
spellingShingle Chao Wang
Dong Mu
An LCA study of an electricity coal supply chain
Journal of Industrial Engineering and Management
life cycle assessment
electricity coal supply chain
sensitivity analysis
title An LCA study of an electricity coal supply chain
title_full An LCA study of an electricity coal supply chain
title_fullStr An LCA study of an electricity coal supply chain
title_full_unstemmed An LCA study of an electricity coal supply chain
title_short An LCA study of an electricity coal supply chain
title_sort lca study of an electricity coal supply chain
topic life cycle assessment
electricity coal supply chain
sensitivity analysis
url http://www.jiem.org/index.php/jiem/article/view/1053
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AT dongmu anlcastudyofanelectricitycoalsupplychain
AT chaowang lcastudyofanelectricitycoalsupplychain
AT dongmu lcastudyofanelectricitycoalsupplychain