Knowledge Agora



Scientific Article details

Title A customized multi-cycle model for measuring the sustainability of circular pathways in agri-food supply chains
ID_Doc 22580
Authors Stillitano, T; Falcone, G; Iofrida, N; Spada, E; Gulisano, G; De Luca, AI
Title A customized multi-cycle model for measuring the sustainability of circular pathways in agri-food supply chains
Year 2022
Published
DOI 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.157229
Abstract Circular economy (CE) is claimed to be a promising pathway to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), but a reliable metric is needed to validate closed-loop strategies by measuring sustainability performances together with the degree of circularity. A significant contribution is offered by Life Cycle (LC) scholars in terms of methodological advances and operational tools for different sectors, also those more complex such as the agro-industrial systems that encompass biological and anthropogenic variables at different scales. However, to date, LC methodologies have not yet answered how to model the complexity of circular pathways. LC evaluations are often modelled for cradleto-grave analyses, while a circularity evaluation would require an extension of the system boundaries to more interconnected life cycles, orienting towards a cradle-to-cradle perspective. This research gap led us to propose a multi-cycle approach with expanded assessment boundaries, including co-products, into a cradle-to-cradle perspective, in an attempt to internalize circularity impacts. The customized LC framework here proposed is based on the Life Cycle Assessment (LCA), the Environmental Life Cycle Costing (ELCC) in terms of internal and external costs, and the Social Life Cycle Assessment (SLCA) in terms of Psychosocial Risk Factor (PRF) impact pathway. The model is designed to be applied to the olive-oil sector, which commonly causes significant impacts by generating many by-products whose management is often problematic. Results are expected to show that the customized LC framework proposed can better highlight the environmental and socioeconomic performances of the system of cycles, allowing CE to deliver its promises of sustainability, as the circularity of materials per se is a means, not an end in itself.
Author Keywords Sustainability; Life cycle methodologies; Multi-cycle model; Circular economy; Agri-food sector; Olive-oil supply chain
Index Keywords Index Keywords
Document Type Other
Open Access Open Access
Source Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
EID WOS:000862857100011
WoS Category Environmental Sciences
Research Area Environmental Sciences & Ecology
PDF
Similar atricles
Scroll