Taylor & Francis Group
Browse
1/1
7 files

Trade-offs in sustainability impacts of introducing cascade use of wood

dataset
posted on 2017-07-27, 17:16 authored by Tommi Suominen, Janni Kunttu, Gediminas Jasinevičius, Diana Tuomasjukka, Marcus Lindner

The aim of this study was to analyse the sustainability impacts of allocating material from energy use to material use by adding cascaded wood into production of wood products. A case study is presented, where we analyse sustainability impacts of cascade use alternatives compared to the non-cascade use practice in particleboard production within the province of North Karelia, Finland. Direct impacts are captured using sustainability indicators representing environmental, economic and social aspects of sustainability. Results show that introducing cascaded wood can increase carbon storage in wood products, employment and production costs. Energy use and GHG emissions increase as well, when the total industrial activity during the lifetime of wood increases. We conclude that cascade use can improve resource efficiency as it enables the use of wood multiple times before combustion; however, the amount of waste wood for energy generation decreases locally, and alternative sources of energy need to be identified.

Funding

The research leading to these results has been supported by the EU through the Marie Curie Initial Training Networks (ITN) action CASTLE [grant agreement no. 316020], and by the EU’s Seventh Framework Programme for Research (FP7) as part of the project OPERAs [grant agreement no. 308393]. The contents of this publication reflect only the authors’ views and the European Union is not liable for any use that may be made of the information contained therein.

History