Assessing potential desertification environmental impact in life cycle assessment. Part 2 : agricultural case study in Spain and Argentina
Resumen
Purpose Land use in dry lands can result in a final stage
where land is completely depleted or entirely degraded causing the desertification phenomenon. The first part (part 1) of
this series of two articles proposed a methodology to include
desertification in life cycle assessment (LCA). A set of variables to be measured in the life cycle inventory, characterization factors, and an impact assessment method for the life
cycle impact assessment phase were proposed. This second
part (part 2) aims at showing the application of the model
proposed in part 1 on two case studies of agricultural
activities.
Methods The impact model proposed is applied to plots of
land devoted to agricultural activities in two countries:
Argentina and Spain. In the agricultural plots of Spain
(1SP to 9SP), two crops were analyzed: winter wheat
(Triticum aestivum) and rapeseed (RS, Brassica napus).
Two crops were considered in the Argentinean case study:
rapeseed (RS, B. napus) and digit grass (Digitaria eriantha)
(10AR to 17AR). A bare soil state is considered in both
countries as a reference state. Both case studies consider
only the agricultural stage in the inventory of a complete life
cycle assessment study. Both also consider only one impact
category in life cycle environmental assessment: desertification impact due to land occupation.
Results and discussion On the basis of the obtained results, it
can be inferred that cultivating 1 ha of rapeseed and 1 ha of wheat
has the same impact on the analyzed plots in Spain and improves
the reference state conditions in 50 % of the cases. Moreover,
rapeseed grown in Mendoza produces almost the same impact as
in some of the Spanish plots. Normalized areas of plots could be
useful to compare results in different regions of the world to
avoid the influence of the area of occupation in results.
Conclusions The proposed model implies a contribution of
significant importance because so far there has not been an
impact assessment tool for land use in dry lands within the
LCA framework. The main strength of the proposed model is
that it allows a simple way to quantify the desertification
impact. Also, it is emphasized that the model can be adapted
virtually without difficulty to the evaluation of all types of
crops with different management practices in different regions
in the life cycle impact assessment stage.
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