Integrating Individual Behavior Dimension in Social Life Cycle Assessment in an Energy Transition Context
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Roadmaps to Energy Transition
1.2. The Role of Values in Energy Transition
1.3. Social Assessment of Energy Transition
2. Materials and Methods
- How much does an “individual dimension” exist in S-LCA guidelines and methodological sheets?
- Which are the relevant studies regarding S-LCA and energy systems and do these assess the human dimension and behavior?
2.1. Literature Source and Search
2.2. Case Study: The Netherlands
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Assessing the Social Performance of the Case Study with Existing S-LCA Indicators
3.1.1. S-LCA Literature Review Results
3.1.2. Life Cycle Impact Assessment with Existing Indicators
3.2. The Individual Dimension in the Existing S-LCA Method
Existing S-LCA Guidelines and Methodological Sheets Results
3.3. Expansion of the Individual Dimension in S-LCA Method
3.3.1. Stakeholder: Prosumer
Social Acceptability
Educational Level
Common Enemy
Policies for End-Users
Communication to Individuals
3.3.2. Stakeholder: Local Community
Community Engagement
Community Identity
3.3.3. Stakeholder: Society
Environmental Focused Mainstream Media
3.4. Life Cycle Impact Assessment with Suggested Hotspot Indicators
3.5. Overview
3.6. Limitations
4. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Stakeholder Categories | Subcategories | Hotspot Indicators | Netherlands |
---|---|---|---|
Local community | Delocalization and migration | International Migrants as a Percentage of Population (%) | 10–15 [64] |
Community engagement | Public Trust of Politicians (%) | 57 [65] | |
Freedom of Peaceful Assembly and Association (qualitative) | 1 [66] | ||
Transparency of Government Policymaking (ranking) | 6th [67] | ||
Respect of indigenous rights | Human Rights Issues Faced by Indigenous Peoples (qualitative) | Undocumented migrants continued to be deprived of their rights [68] | |
Indigenous Land Rights Conflicts/Land Claims (qualitative) | A legal process exists for claimants to request the return of property looted during the Holocaust [68] | ||
Local employment | Unemployment Statistics by Country (%) | Low [69] | |
Poverty and Working Poverty by Country (%) | Low [70] | ||
Presence of Local Supply Networks (qualitative) | Yes | ||
Access to immaterial resources | Freedom of Expression in Country of Operation (qualitative) | Good [68] | |
Levels of Technology Transfer (ranking) | 8 | ||
Access to material resources | Changes in Land Ownership (%) | 94.27 [71] | |
Levels of Industrial Water Use (%) | 88 [72] | ||
Extraction of Material Resources (ktons) | 7.93 [73] | ||
Percent of Population (Urban, Rural, Total) with Access to Improved Sanitation Facilities (%) | 99.95 [72] | ||
Safe and healthy living conditions | Burden of Disease by Country (per capita) (DALY) | 0.0 [74] | |
Pollution Levels by Country (μg PM2.5/m3) | Ok [75] | ||
Presence/Strength of Laws on Construction Safety Regulations by Country (ranking) | 16.84 [76] | ||
Secure living conditions g | State of Security and Human Rights in Country of Operation (qualitative) | Civilian authorities in the entire kingdom maintained effective control over the security forces [66] | |
Strength of Public Security in Country of Operation (index) | 10.14 [76] | ||
Value chain actors | Fair competition | Natural law and regulation (qualitative) | Liberalized and open market |
Sectoral regulation (qualitative) | Regulatory instability in renewable energies | ||
Respect of intellectual property rights h | General Intellectual Property Rights and related issues associated with the economic sector (qualitative) | Yes | |
Promoting social responsibility i | Industry code of conduct in the sector (%) | Large percentage of corporations publishing GRI and CSR reports | |
Consumer | Health and safety | Quality of or number of information/signs on product health and safety | Not applicable |
Presence of consumer complaints (at a national level) (qualitative) | Not applicable | ||
Feedback mechanism j | Presence of feedback mechanisms (by country) (qualitative) | Yes [77] | |
Privacy k | Country privacy ranking (1–5 scale) (ranking) | 2.1 [78] | |
Country ranking related to the strength of laws protecting privacy against organizations and government (ranking) | Good | ||
Transparency | Presence of a law or norm regarding transparency (qualitative) | Government obliges reporting [79] | |
Sector transparency rating; the number of organizations by sector which published a sustainability report (GRI) (amount) | All [79] | ||
End-of-life responsibility | Strength of national legislation covering product disposal and recycling (amount) | Not applicable [80] | |
Worker | Freedom of association and collective bargaining | Evidence of restriction to Freedom of association and Collective bargaining (qualitative) | 0 out of 5 [81] |
Evidence of country/sector non-respect or support to Freedom of association and Collective bargaining (qualitative) | 0.5 out of 5 [81] | ||
Operations identified in which the right to exercise freedom of association and collective bargaining may be at significant risk, and actions taken to support these rights (qualitative) | 0.5 out of 5 [81] | ||
Child labor | Percentage of children working by country and sector (%) | None [81] | |
Fair salary o | Minimum wage by country (€) | 1578 [81] | |
Non-poverty-wage by country (€) | 780–1030 [81] | ||
Hours of work | Excessive Hours of work (qualitative) | Done but paid and protected [81] | |
Forced labor | Percentage (estimate) of forced labor by region (%) | 0.1 [81] | |
Government response rating to modern slavery (rating) | 3 out of 10 [82] | ||
Equal opportunities | Women in the Labor force participation rate by country (%) | 58.7 [83] | |
Country gender index ranking (rating) | 11.1 [83] | ||
Health and safety | Occupational accident rate by country or sector (%) | 0.59 per 100,000 [81] | |
Social benefit/social security | Social security expenditure as a percentage of GDP (%) | 11 [81] | |
Society | Public commitment to sustainability issues | Existence of (legal) obligation on public sustainability reporting (qualitative) | Yes [84] |
Engagement of sector regarding sustainability (qualitative) | Ok [84] | ||
Prevention and mitigation of conflicts | Is the organization doing business in a region with ongoing conflicts? (qualitative) | Not applicable | |
Is the organization doing business in a sector that features linkages to conflicts? (qualitative) | Not applicable | ||
Is the organization doing business in a sector otherwise linked to the escalation or de-escalation of conflicts? (qualitative) | Not applicable | ||
Contribution to economic development | Economic situation of the country (USD) | Rich and developed economy [85] | |
Relevance of the considered sector for the economy (%) | 0.17% [85] | ||
Corruption | Risk of corruption in the country and/or sub-region (ranking) | 18 [86] | |
Risk of corruption in the sector (%) | No data | ||
Technology Development | Sector efforts in technology development | 0 out of 5 | |
Research and development costs for the sector (M€) | 600 [87] |
Stakeholder Group | Subcategory |
---|---|
Consumer | Health and safety |
Privacy | |
Worker | Health and safety |
Local community | Community engagement |
Safe and healthy living conditions | |
Secure living conditions | |
Local employment | |
Society | Public commitment to sustainability issues |
Contribution to economic development | |
Technology development |
# | Inventory Indicator | Unit of Measurement | Data Source |
---|---|---|---|
Social acceptability | |||
Hotspot indicators | |||
1 | Individual’s awareness of climate change | Semi-quantitative | Eurobarometer a |
Specific analysis indicators | |||
3 | Individual factors | Semi-quantitative | Questionnaire |
4 | Distributional justice | Qualitative | Questionnaire |
5 | Effect on personal comfort | Qualitative | Questionnaire |
6 | Setting personal goals for environmental improvement | Qualitative | Questionnaire or LCRI c |
Educational level | |||
Specific analysis indicators | |||
7 | Lifelong learning promotion | Quantitative | National statistics b |
8 | Sufficient knowledge to get started | Qualitative | Questionnaire |
Common enemy | |||
Hotspot indicators | |||
9 | Environmental concern | Semi-quantitative | Eurobarometer a |
Policies for end-users | |||
Hotspot indicators | |||
10 | Ease of installing or converting to RE | Qualitative | Governmental agencies or questionnaire |
11 | Governmental budget for environment | Quantitative | National statistics b |
12 | Civil society actors involvement in decision making | Quantitative | National statistics b |
Specific analysis indicators | |||
13 | Policies developed to defend producers-users | Qualitative | Governmental agencies |
14 | Decentralized policy coordination | Quantitative | |
15 | Financial support for small scale projects | Quantitative | National statistics b |
Communication to individuals | |||
Hotspot indicators | |||
16 | Effective two ways communication or one way? | Qualitative | Questionnaire |
Specific analysis indicators | |||
17 | Diverse communication and planning team (project developers, engineers, and policy-makers) | Qualitative | Questionnaire |
18 | Possibilities to voice individual opinion | Qualitative | Questionnaire |
# | Inventory Indicator | Unit of Measurement | Data Source |
---|---|---|---|
Community engagement | |||
Hotspot indicators | |||
19 | Number of energy cooperatives engaged in renewable energy plants on a national level | Quantitative | National statistics a |
Specific analysis indicators | |||
20 | Number of energy cooperatives engaged in renewable energy plants on a regional level | Quantitative | Questionnaire |
Community identity | |||
Hotspot indicators | |||
21 | Percentage of entrepreneurs in the country | Semi-quantitative | National statistics a |
Specific analysis indicators | |||
22 | Community attributes (age, education, municipality board dynamics) | Qualitative | Questionnaire |
23 | Respecting alternative opinions and deep opposition a | Qualitative | Questionnaire |
24 | Inclusiveness amongst local businesses | Qualitative | Questionnaire |
# | Inventory Indicator | Unit of Measurement | Data Source |
---|---|---|---|
Environmentally focused mainstream mass media | |||
Hotspot indicators | |||
25 | Number of mass media and their popularity | Quantitative | Questionnaire |
Stakeholder Categories | Subcategories | Hotspots Inventory Indicators | Netherlands |
---|---|---|---|
Local community | Community engagement | Number of energy cooperatives engaged in renewable energy plants on a national level | [104] |
Community identity | Percentage of entrepreneurs in the country | [105] | |
Prosumer | Social acceptability | Individual’s awareness of climate change | [106] |
Common enemy | Environmental concern | [106] | |
Policies for end-users | Ease of installing or converting to RE | [107] | |
Governmental budget for environment | [108,109,110] | ||
Civil society actors involvement in decision making | [111,112] | ||
Communication to individuals | Effective two ways communication or one way? | [113,114] | |
Society | Environmentally focused mainstream media | Mass media and their popularity | [115] |
Indicators | Hedonic | Egoistic | Altruistic | Biospheric |
---|---|---|---|---|
Prosumer | ||||
Individual factors | X | X | X | X |
Setting personal goals for environmental improvement | X | X | X | X |
Distributional justice | X | |||
Effect on personal comfort | X | |||
Lifelong learning promotion | X | X | ||
Sufficient knowledge to get started | X | X | X | X |
Policies developed to defend producers-users | X | X | ||
Decentralized policy coordination | X | |||
Financial support for small scale projects | X | X | ||
Diverse communication and planning team (project developers, engineers, and policy-makers) | X | |||
Possibilities to voice public opinion | X | |||
Local community | ||||
Number of energy cooperatives engaged in renewable energy plants | X | X | X | |
Respecting alternative opinions and deep opposition | X | |||
Inclusiveness amongst local businesses | X |
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Tsalidis, G.A. Integrating Individual Behavior Dimension in Social Life Cycle Assessment in an Energy Transition Context. Energies 2020, 13, 5984. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13225984
Tsalidis GA. Integrating Individual Behavior Dimension in Social Life Cycle Assessment in an Energy Transition Context. Energies. 2020; 13(22):5984. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13225984
Chicago/Turabian StyleTsalidis, Georgios Archimidis. 2020. "Integrating Individual Behavior Dimension in Social Life Cycle Assessment in an Energy Transition Context" Energies 13, no. 22: 5984. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13225984
APA StyleTsalidis, G. A. (2020). Integrating Individual Behavior Dimension in Social Life Cycle Assessment in an Energy Transition Context. Energies, 13(22), 5984. https://doi.org/10.3390/en13225984