Life cycle inventory of bitumen in South Africa

Road pavements are constructed of bulk raw materials such as aggregate, cement, bitumen and water. The environmental, social, and economic impacts of the materials and processes should be quantified and monitored towards the optimisation of pavement design. At present, no such protocol is in place i...

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Main Authors: Sheldon A. Blaauw, James W. Maina, Louis J. Grobler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-12-01
Series:Transportation Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666691X20300208
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spelling doaj-e326eb9ad2414985b29437c8daaf9cfe2021-03-18T04:43:09ZengElsevierTransportation Engineering2666-691X2020-12-012100019Life cycle inventory of bitumen in South AfricaSheldon A. Blaauw0James W. Maina1Louis J. Grobler2Department of Civil Engineering, University of Pretoria, Private Bag X20, Hatfield 0028, South Africa; Ove Arup & Partners Limited, 1st Floor City Gate West, Tollhouse Hill, Nottingham NG1 5AT, United Kingdom; Corresponding author.Department of Civil Engineering, University of Pretoria, Private Bag X20, Hatfield 0028, South AfricaDinokeng Engineers, Office@Nature, 500 Botterklapper Street, Die Wilgers, Pretoria 38602, South AfricaRoad pavements are constructed of bulk raw materials such as aggregate, cement, bitumen and water. The environmental, social, and economic impacts of the materials and processes should be quantified and monitored towards the optimisation of pavement design. At present, no such protocol is in place in South Africa. This paper proposes a framework for the development of a pavement life cycle assessment model, starting by documenting the life cycle inventory for bitumen, one of the leading environmental and social burdensome materials used for pavement development.This inventory acts as the first building block in the development of a life cycle assessment model by evaluating and delineating primary flows (inputs of materials and energy and outputs of pollution) related to the supply chain of bitumen in South Africa. The primary flows are represented by indicators which measure their quantitative impacts. The inventory provides impact category indicators for environmental and social related emissions, energy- and water-use and currently excludes other indicators such as emissions to water, waste generation, jobs creation and economic transformation, amongst others. These indicators are omitted due to lack of quality data at present and difficulty in the quantification of impacts, but recognition is given to their relevancy and importance.The approach is envisioned to function as the first version of a living protocol that will be improved on through further research. Although the primary target audience is South African road authorities, the approach can be adapted for use in any country.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666691X20300208Life cycle assessmentLife cycle inventoryPavement sustainabilityCarbon dioxide equivalentBitumen
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sheldon A. Blaauw
James W. Maina
Louis J. Grobler
spellingShingle Sheldon A. Blaauw
James W. Maina
Louis J. Grobler
Life cycle inventory of bitumen in South Africa
Transportation Engineering
Life cycle assessment
Life cycle inventory
Pavement sustainability
Carbon dioxide equivalent
Bitumen
author_facet Sheldon A. Blaauw
James W. Maina
Louis J. Grobler
author_sort Sheldon A. Blaauw
title Life cycle inventory of bitumen in South Africa
title_short Life cycle inventory of bitumen in South Africa
title_full Life cycle inventory of bitumen in South Africa
title_fullStr Life cycle inventory of bitumen in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Life cycle inventory of bitumen in South Africa
title_sort life cycle inventory of bitumen in south africa
publisher Elsevier
series Transportation Engineering
issn 2666-691X
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Road pavements are constructed of bulk raw materials such as aggregate, cement, bitumen and water. The environmental, social, and economic impacts of the materials and processes should be quantified and monitored towards the optimisation of pavement design. At present, no such protocol is in place in South Africa. This paper proposes a framework for the development of a pavement life cycle assessment model, starting by documenting the life cycle inventory for bitumen, one of the leading environmental and social burdensome materials used for pavement development.This inventory acts as the first building block in the development of a life cycle assessment model by evaluating and delineating primary flows (inputs of materials and energy and outputs of pollution) related to the supply chain of bitumen in South Africa. The primary flows are represented by indicators which measure their quantitative impacts. The inventory provides impact category indicators for environmental and social related emissions, energy- and water-use and currently excludes other indicators such as emissions to water, waste generation, jobs creation and economic transformation, amongst others. These indicators are omitted due to lack of quality data at present and difficulty in the quantification of impacts, but recognition is given to their relevancy and importance.The approach is envisioned to function as the first version of a living protocol that will be improved on through further research. Although the primary target audience is South African road authorities, the approach can be adapted for use in any country.
topic Life cycle assessment
Life cycle inventory
Pavement sustainability
Carbon dioxide equivalent
Bitumen
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666691X20300208
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