Greenhouse Gas Emission in Jewelry Industry: A Case Study of Silver Flat Ring

This paper describes an assessment of the carbon footprint (CF) of a silver ring, together with an attempt to measure material and energy consumption. The boundary of analyzing CF was defined as Business to Business (B2B). All primary data were obtained from a survey of the case study factory. Acqu...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Parnuwat Usapein, Chantra Tongcumpou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Environmental Research Institute, Chulalongkorn University 2016-03-01
Series:Applied Environmental Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ph01-ohno.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/aer/article/view/40881
Description
Summary:This paper describes an assessment of the carbon footprint (CF) of a silver ring, together with an attempt to measure material and energy consumption. The boundary of analyzing CF was defined as Business to Business (B2B). All primary data were obtained from a survey of the case study factory. Acquisition of raw material (silver) was the main GHG contribution to the overall CF and was thus considered as a CF hotspot. Acquisition accounted for 0.9740 kg CO2e or 94.44% of total emissions, followed by production processes (0.0573 kg CO2e) and transportation (0.002 kg CO2e). The total CF amounted to 1.03 kg CO2e per silver ring product. To reduce the CF, it is suggested that choosing low GHG production processes could result in significant reduction in total CF. In addition, the study proposes options for recycling waste and using high performance electronic equipment.
ISSN:2287-0741
2287-075X