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Model til udpegning af fremtidige indsatsområder inden for Program for renere
produkter
Bilag A
1 Om eiolca.net
Citeret fra www.eiolca.net:
What is the EIOLCA model used on the eiolca.net web site?
The Economic Input Output-Life Cycle Assessment software traces out the various
economic transactions, resource requirements and environmental emissions require for a
particular product or service. The model captures all the various manufacturing,
transportation, mining and related requirements to produce a product or service. For
example, you might wish to trace out the implications of purchasing $ 46,000 of
reinforcing steel and $ 104,000 of concrete for a kilometer of roadway pavement.
Environmental implications of these purchases can be estimated using EIOLCA. The model is
based upon the Department of Commerce's 485x485 commodity input-output model of the US
economy.
What are the data sources for the eiolca.net software?
The data in eiolca.net is developed from a variety of public datasets and assembled for
various commodity sectors. For the most part, the data is self-reported and is subject to
measurement error and reporting requirement gaps. For example, automotive repair shops do
not have to report to the Toxics Release Inventory. The major data sources include:
 | Input/Output Matrix: 1992 commodity/commodity input-output (IO) matrix of the US
economy as developed by the US Department of Commerce. The matrix includes 485 commodity
sectors. |
 | Economic Impacts are computed from the IO matrix and the user input change in final
demand. Economic Impacts are reported in 1992 $ millions. |
 | Electricity use includes manufacturing and mining sectors developed from the 1992
Census of Manufacturers. Service sector electricity use is estimated using the detailed IO
workfiles and average electricity prices for these sectors. |
 | Fuel and ore use is calculated from commodity purchases (contained in the IO
workfiles) and average 1992 prices. |
 | Energy use is calculated by converting fuel use per sector and 31% of electricity
use into Terrajoules (31% is the amount of electricity produced in 1992 from non-fossil
fuel sources). |
 | Revision: Fuel, Electricity, and Energy use have
been revised. Please refer to this report. |
 | Fertilizer use is calculated from commodity purchases (contained in the IO
workfiles) and average 1992 prices. |
 | Conventional Pollutant emissions are from the U.S. EPA AIRS web site, using
a concordance to the input-output sectors. |
 | Greenhouse Gas Emissions calculated by emissions factors from fuel use using U.S.
EPA AP-42 emissions factors for CO2 and Methane. N2O emissions
estimated to be 10% of NOx emissions. Global Warming Potential (GWP) values
converted into CO2 equivalents using the Adriaanse report. Adriaanse, A.,
"Environmental Policy Performance Indicators - A Study on the Development of
Indicators for Environmental Policy in the Netherlands," Sdu Uitgeverij
Koninginnegracht, May 1993. |
 | Toxics Releases are derived from the US EPA's 1995 toxics release inventory (TRI)
and 1995 value of shipments from the 1995 Annual Survey of Manufacturers. |
 | CMU-ET is a weighting scheme for toxic emissions to account for their relative
hazard. It is computed from occupational exposure standards (called threshold limit
values). The gross amount of toxic emissions is converted into metric tons of sulfuric
acid emissions equivalent. More information is available here. |
 | RCRA (Resource Conservation and Recovery Act) Subtitle C hazardous waste generation,
management and shipment was derived from the 1993 biannual US EPA report. |
 | External costs are calculated from conventional air pollutant emissions and
estimates of pollution damage taken from the economics literature. Detailed information on
these values are available from the following source: H. Scott Matthews, "The
External Costs of Air Pollution and the Environmental Impacts of the Consumer in the U.S.
Economy," Ph.D. Thesis, Carnegie Mellon, 1999. |
 | Water data from U.S. Department of Commerce, "Water Use in Manufacturing,"
1982 Census of Manufactures, Subject Series, Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Commerce,
Economics and Statistics Administration, Bureau of the Census, MC82-S-6, March 1986. |
 | OSHA Safety Data from the following sources:
|
 | U.S. BLS (Bureau of Labor Statistics). 1994. Survey of Occupational Injuries and
Illnesses 1992. Washington, D.C.:U.S. Department of Labor.
|
 | U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Census of Fatal Occupational
Injuries, 1992 - 1998.
|
 | Employment data from the following sources (by use):
|
 | 1997 Economic Census: Comparative Statistics for United States 1987 SIC Basis
|
 | U.S. BLS 1997. Industry Illness and Injury Data 1997
|
 | Statistical Abstract of the United States (1998-200)
|
 | National Marine Fisheries Service. 2000. Employment, Craft, and Plants (Table)
Processors and Wholesalers 1999
|
 | Bureau of Transportation Statistics. Employment in For-Hire Transporation and Selected
Transportation-Related Industries http://www.bts.gov/btsprod/nts/Ch3_web/3-19.htm
|
 | USDA. Agricultural Exports and the Rural Economy in the 1990's
http://www.ers.usda.gov/publications/rct71/rct71f.pdf |
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