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Article

Life Cycle Energy and Environmental Assessment of the Thermal Insulation Improvement in Residential Buildings

by
Maria Anna Cusenza
1,
Teresa Maria Gulotta
1,
Marina Mistretta
2,* and
Maurizio Cellura
1
1
Dipartimento di Ingegneria, Università degli Studi di Palermo, Viale delle Scienze Ed.9, 90128 Palermo, Italy
2
Dipartimento di Patrimonio, Architettura, Urbanistica, Università degli Studi Mediterranea di Reggio, Calabria, Salita Melissari, 89124 Reggio Calabria, Italy
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Energies 2021, 14(12), 3452; https://doi.org/10.3390/en14123452
Submission received: 7 May 2021 / Revised: 7 June 2021 / Accepted: 9 June 2021 / Published: 10 June 2021

Abstract

:
The refurbishment of the building stock is a key strategy towards the achievement of the climate and energy goals of the European Union. This study aims at evaluating the energy and environmental impacts associated with retrofitting a residential apartment to improve its vertical envelope thermal insulation. Two insulation materials, stone wool and cellulose fibers, are compared. The life cycle assessment methodology is applied assuming 1 m2 of retrofitted vertical envelope as functional unit. Moreover, to estimate the net energy and environmental benefits achievable in the retrofitted scenario compared with the non-retrofitted one, a second analysis is performed in which the system boundaries are expanded to include the building operational phase, and 1 m2 of walkable floor per year is assumed as reference. The results show that the use of cellulose fibers involve lower impacts in most of the assessed categories compared to stone wool, except for abiotic resource depletion. In detail, the use of cellulose fibers allows to reduce the impact on climate change up to 20% and the consumption of primary energy up to 10%. The evaluation of the net energy and environmental benefits shows the effectiveness of the retrofit energy policies.

1. Introduction

The building sector accounts for about 40% of energy consumption and 36% of the CO2 emissions of the European Union (EU [1]), it is responsible for over 50% of the use of extracted materials [2] and for 38% of the waste generated [3]. Therefore, improving the environmental performances of the building sector is crucial for achieving the European targets in terms of reduction of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and energy efficiency [4], and for the transition towards a true circular development.
The EU building stock has a large potential of energy and emissions savings, since a large share of buildings were built before any energy efficiency regulation was actually in force [1]. EU policy makers have long recognised the key role of the buildings retrofit in the transition towards a more sustainable economic system. Directive 2018/844/EU [1] highlights the need of a long-term strategy to support the renovation of the national building stock into a highly energy efficient and decarbonised one by 2050. Recently, as underlined by the European Commission in the European Green Deal action plan, the application of the energy performance legislation in the building sector is of paramount importance to achieve the Agenda 2030 Sustainable Development Goals [5] also through the widespread diffusion of positive energy districts and zero energy communities [6,7], the application of circular economy strategies at the urban level [8], the use of climate-resilient, low-impact construction techniques. According to the European Commission Communication on the renovation wave (COM(2020) 662) by 2030 the EU should reduce buildings’ GHGs by 60%, their final energy consumption by 14% and energy consumption for heating and cooling by 18%, in order to cut the emission of GHGs in the EU by at least 55% compared to 1990 [9]. Matching these targets requires at least double the annual energy renovation rate of residential and non-residential buildings by 2030 [9].
In this framework, the use of a life cycle approach for the assessment of the potential energy and environmental impacts and benefits of the retrofit actions can provide an effective support to the identification of the most effective strategies towards high performance buildings. The life cycle approach allows assessing the whole life cycle of a product/process/system and the impacts in a wide range of environmental categories avoiding the burden shifting from one stage of the life cycle to another and/or from one environmental impact category to another [10,11].
In this context, the authors apply the life cycle assessment (LCA) methodology according to the ISO14040 and ISO14044 standards [12,13] with the aim to assess the potential life cycle energy and environmental impacts and benefits due to the installation of thermal insulation in the vertical envelope of residential buildings. Two insulation materials are compared, a bio-based (cellulose fibers) and a conventional material (stone wool). Moreover, to estimate the net energy and environmental benefits achievable the retrofit scenario is compared with a non-retrofitted scenario. Finally, to provide a more effective description of the energy and environmental performances and an easy comparison of the two alternatives, the energy and environmental impacts were complemented with payback time (IPBT) indices calculated for all the impact categories.
The results can support policy makers to plan building renovation strategies based on reliable results on the achievable net energy and environmental benefits. The comparison of a bio-based material with a conventional material for thermal insulation can support the integration of the circular and bio-economy principles in the building renovation [14].

2. Literature Review

Several LCAs on buildings have been carried out in the last decades. However, an extended literature review performed by Cabeza et al. [15] highlights that there are few LCAs focused on building retrofit actions. Moreover, based on authors knowledge, few LCAs compare the environmental performances of different thermal insulation materials.
Llantoy et al. [16] developed a LCA aimed at analysing and comparing the environmental impacts of different insulation materials: polyurethane (thermal conductivity 0.028 W/(m K)), extruded polystyrene (thermal conductivity 0.034 W/(m K)), and glass wool (thermal conductivity 0.035 W/(m K)). The insulation materials are installed in four houses, located at an experimental site in Spain. The system boundaries included manufacturing and operational phases. The impact assessment results—expressed in Recipe points and GWP—pointed out that mineral wool presented better environmental performance, and extruded polystyrene presented a similar environmental impact to polyurethane; however, extruded polystyrene presented the worst environmental performance of all materials evaluated.
Sierra-Pérez et al. [17] performed a LCA to assess the environmental impacts of façade systems in which different insulation materials were employed: stone wool (thermal conductivity 0.039 W/(m K)), glass wool (thermal conductivity 0.036 W/(m K)), expanded polystyrene (thermal conductivity 0.035 W/(m K)), extruded polystyrene (thermal conductivity 0.032 W/(m K)), and polyurethane (thermal conductivity 0.023 W/(m K)). The study followed a from cradle to gate approach (from façade construction materials production up to installation to the building) and showed that stone wool is the insulation material that contributes most to the environmental impacts examined. The second most impactful material is expanded polystyrene. Extruded polystyrene and polyurethane have similar results in almost all the categories investigated, while glass wool is the least impactful insulation material.
The main conclusions of the LCA results obtained by Llantoy et al. [16] and Sierra-Pérez et al. [17] are similar.
Beccali et al. [18] applied the LCA methodology to evaluate the life cycle energy and environmental benefits due to the following retrofit/renewable energy installation actions in a residential building: the installation of a photovoltaic system, of a condensing boiler, application of thermal insulation of the building envelope using expanded polystyrene (for the building façade and ground floor) and stone wool for the roof. However, the comparison of the environmental performance of expanded polystyrene and stone wool was out of the scope of the study.
According to the literature examined, few LCAs have been published on the use of renewable insulation materials [16]. Sierra-Pérez et al. [17] evaluated the life cycle impacts related to the production process of a cork insulation board and compared the environmental impacts with those associated to conventional insulation materials: stone wool, glass wool, expanded polystyrene, extruded polystyrene and polyurethane. Ardente et al. [19] applied LCA with the aim to assess the energy and environmental benefits and drawbacks associated with the use of kenaf-fiber thermal insulation material into residential buildings and compare them with the performances of various conventional insulation materials, like polyurethane, glass wool, flax rolls, stone wool, etc. Both Sierra-Pérez et al. [17] and Ardente et al. [19] highlight that the use of natural insulation materials does not necessarily imply a reduction of the overall environmental impacts.
Considering the increasing interest in renewable biological resources in the context of the European Bioeconomy Strategy [14], deeper insight into the effective contribution of these materials towards a sustainable and circular economy is paramount. In addition, to support the building renovation wave initiative, the indication of the period of construction can provide a useful indication in defining an order of priority for interventions and in the allocation of the financial resources.
Recently, Gulotta et al. [20] assessed the energy and environmental impacts related to the reduction of the thermal transmittance of the EU28 building stock (including buildings realized before 1945 up to 2010) through the employment of four different insulation materials: wood board, cork slab, cellulose fibers, and stone wool. In addition, they compared the renovated building stock with the no-renovated option. The study followed a cradle to grave approach with a dynamic simulation of the building operation phase. The authors reported aggregated environmental results for the EU context and for different retrofit solutions with no individual focus on the role of the insulation.
Concerning the literature examined, the main contributions of this paper are:
  • the assessment and the hot-spots analysis of the potential energy and environmental impacts of the installation of a conventional insulation material, such as stone wool, and a bio-based insulation material, cellulose fibers as retrofit intervention in residential buildings;
  • the assessment of the net energy and environmental impacts and benefits due to retrofitted buildings, representative of the Italian context, characterized by different construction periods, compared with the non-retrofitted ones, assuming a from cradle-to-grave perspective.

3. Materials and Methods

The methodological approach integrates a dynamic bottom-up approach for building simulation and the LCA for the assessment of the environmental impacts [20].

3.1. Case Study

The building types under investigation are urban residential multi-family houses (MHFs) in Italy and representative of three construction periods: 1945–1969, 1970–1989, and 1990–2010. About 93% of the Italian residential houses, both MFHs and single-family houses (SFH), are built before 2010, the year of the first EPBD Directive [21], thus it can be safe to assume that the overall building stock in Italy has a high energy saving potential [20].
The MFH building model consists of a four-storey building with four flats per elevation (16 in total). Each flat has 90 m2 of usable area and 2.70 m story height. It is assumed based on a statistical analysis that MFH accommodates 32 occupants in total (2 for each apartment) [20].
The buildings examined have a reinforced concrete frame, masonry brick with an air wall cavity between two layers of gypsum sand plaster envelope, including reinforced concrete floor and roof. In addition, the MFHs built in 1990–2010 include 2 cm of insulation material in the vertical envelope. The U values of the walls are 1.76 W/(m2 K), 1.47 W/(m2 K), and 0.81 W/(m2 K) respectively for the 1945–1969, 1970–1989, and 1990–2010 construction periods, respectively [22].
Figure 1 illustrates the breakdown of the Italian residential building stock in 2010 by type of dwelling (MFH and SFH) and by degree of urbanization of the urban areas. In detail, urban areas are classified into three types: (1) Cities (densely populated), (2) Towns and suburbs (intermediate density) and (3) Rural areas (thinly populated) (https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/web/degree-of-urbanisation, accessed on 29 May 2021). In Italy, MFH is the most widespread type of building especially in city areas. In 2010, MFHs represented about 74% of the residential building stock, of which 44.8% in city, 22.5% in town and 6.4% in rural area.

3.2. Life Cycle Assessment

LCA is applied according to the international ISO14040 and ISO14044 [12,13] standards and to EN15978: 2011 and EN15804: 2019 on sustainability of construction works [24,25].

3.2.1. Goal and Scope Definition

The goal of the study is to assess the potential life cycle energy and environmental impacts and benefits of a building envelope retrofit solution consisting of the installation of a thermal insulation material in the vertical envelope of a MFH apartment.
This objective can be further clarified as in the following:
  • to assess the potential impacts related to the retrofit actions (module B5 according to standards EN15978: 2011 and EN15804: 2019) consisting of the installation of a thermal insulation material in the vertical envelope in residential buildings characterized by different construction periods and to identify the processes responsible for the largest contribution to the impacts. The analysis is carried out following a life cycle approach;
  • to compare the life cycle energy and environmental impacts related to the installation of two different thermal insulation materials. In detail, the following scenarios are investigated:
    • conventional insulation material: stone wool (Stone wool Scenario—SwS);
    • bio-based insulation material: cellulose fibers (Cellulose fibers Scenario—CfS).
  • to assess the net potential energy and environmental benefits obtained in retrofitted buildings (RBS), characterized by different construction periods, compared with the non-retrofitted ones (baseline building—BBS).
In compliance with the goals of the study, two functional units (FUs) are considered in the LCA:
  • FU for building envelope retrofit assessment—FUR. According to the Product Environmental Footprint Category Rules (PEFCRs) for thermal insulation, the FUR is defined as 1 m2 of vertical envelope, with an insulation thickness that allows the reaching of a U = 0.49 W/(m2 K), with an assumed life span equal to 30 years;
  • FU for life cycle energy saving assessment—FUES. The FUES is defined as 1 m2 of walkable floor per year. This FU is common in LCA studies in the construction sector [16]. The reference study period is assumed equal to the average replacement period assumed for thermal insulation (30 years).
Figure 2 illustrates the processes considered for the retrofit action (module B5). The system boundaries for FUR (module B5) defined according to the standard EN15978: 2011 include:
  • production of the thermal insulation material and of the other opaque envelope materials that need to be replaced during the retrofit action;
  • material transportation from production site to the building site;
  • end-of-life (EoL) treatment of the retrofit-related wastes;
  • waste materials transportation from the building site to the end-of-life treatment site.
According to the goals of the LCA, to assess the potential energy and environmental benefits (FUES), the scope of the LCA is extended to include the energy saving related to the retrofitted building apartments compared to the baseline (i.e., non-retrofitted building apartments). The comparison between the retrofitted building apartments (retrofitted building scenario—RBS) and the baseline (baseline building scenario—BBS) is carried out considering only the life cycle modules and processes affected by the retrofit actions and excluding those that are unchanged in both RBS and BBS. Figure 3 illustrates the modules included in the expanded scenario for comparing BBS with RBS, according to the modularity principles followed by EN15978: 2011 and EN 15804: 2019 standards. In detail, Module B5 is accounted only for RBS. Module B6 “Operational energy use” is accounted for both RBS and BBS including only the energy uses for heating and cooling, since they are affected by the retrofit action. The transportation to the disposal site and the disposal process of the thermal insulation materials, included in module “C2-transport” and in module “C4-disposal”, respectively, are accounted only for RBS.
The assessment of the environmental impacts is carried out by estimating the contribution of the product system to the main and additional environmental categories recommended by the UNI EN15804:2019 standard, except for the category “depletion of abiotic resources—fossil fuels”. The energy impact assessment is carried out estimating the embodied energy considering both the contribution of non-renewable (fossil) and renewable primary energy.
The energy and environmental impacts are assessed using the following methods:
  • Cumulative energy demand (CED), for the calculation of the embodied energy divided into renewable and non-renewable primary energy [26];
  • EN15804 + A2 Method V1.00 for the calculation of environmental impacts, based on the EF 3.0 method developed by Fazio et al. [27].
The LCA model is implemented in SimaPro software [28].
In Table 1 the energy and environmental impact categories used in the study are listed.
In addition, to get a more effective description of the energy and environmental performances of the retrofit action and an easy comparison of the two alternatives, the energy and environmental impacts were complemented by the impact payback time (IPBT) indices. The IPBT of a building retrofit action is the time needed to generate as much energy (valued as primary) and environmental impacts as those caused during all the life cycle phases of the retrofit action.
The IPBT are calculated through Equation (1)
I P B T , n = I n A I n
where I n is the life cycle impact on the energy or environmental impact category n (unit); A I n is the yearly avoided impact on the energy or environmental impact category n after retrofit (unit/year); n is the number of energy and environmental impact categories investigated.

3.2.2. Life Cycle Inventory

The retrofit is based on the application of thermal insulation in the external walls. This action allows to reduce the U values of the buildings examined from the original values reported in Section 2 to 0.49 W/(m2 K). This U value refers to the average transmittance values for MFHs in warm climatic zone calculated in Gulotta et al. [20]. The average U calculation method accounts for the different thermal transmittance levels identified for the nZEB concept implementation in EU Member States national legislation on buildings [29]. For both CfS and SwS, the thickness of thermal insulation material required to achieve the target value is calculated accounting for the thermal characteristics of the insulation materials. The thermal conductivity and density of materials are respectively 0.039 W/(m K) and 60 kg/m3 for cellulose fibers and 0.040 W/(m K) and 50 kg/m3 for stone wool [30].
Concerning the retrofit intervention (B5) modeling, the amount of thermal insulation materials required in both CfS and SwS is calculated, based on the U value in the BBS and the U value target (0.49 W/(m2 K)) to achieve in RBS. The area of the insulated walls is 91.8 m2. The transportation processes are modeled assuming an average distance of 50 km for both “material production site—construction site” and “construction site—EoL treatment site” routes [31]. The EoL treatment is modeled assuming the disposal in landfill.
The annual energy consumed for heating and cooling in building is calculated through the energy dynamic simulation tool EnergyPlus [32].
The model includes the setting of temperature set points, the modeling of infiltration and natural ventilation as well as the implementation of thermal loads due to the presence of people, equipment, and appliances [20]. The energy mixes for both cooling and heating energy production are inferred from Mantzos et al. [33].
The life cycle inventory list of materials and processes is shown in Table 2, while Table 3 lists the life cycle inventory datasets selected for modeling the background processes of the product system examined. These datasets are inferred from the Ecoinvent 3.6 database [34]. The recycled content, or cut-off, approach is used to compile the life cycle inventory (LCI). In the cut-off approach the impacts of multi-output processes are allocated based on the allocation factors estimated for the specific system model, e.g., on physical relations based on exergy or mass content or economic relation [34].

4. Results and Discussion

4.1. Life Cycle Impact Assessment and Interpretation: The Retrofit Action (Module B5)

Table 4 shows the life cycle impact assessment (LCIA) results caused by the retrofit intervention on the vertical envelope of Italian residential apartment buildings for both CfS and SwS. The comparison of the energy and environmental impacts associated with the SwS and CfS highlights that the CfS performs better than the SwS in almost all the categories examined. The exceptions are renewable embodied energy (EER), land use related impacts/soil quality (LU), water use (WU), depletion of abiotic resources—material and metals (ADPm&m), climate change—biogenic (GWPb) and climate change—land use and land use change (GWPLULUC), in which the percentage variation of the contribution related to the CfS ranges from a minimum value equal to about 4% for WU to a maximum value of about 154% for ADPm&m. A more thorough impact analysis shows that:
  • in EER, LU, GWPb, and GWPLULUC the highest contribution is due to the paper used in the production process of the cellulose fibers insulation material;
  • in ADPm&m, boric acid used to enhance fire retarding properties of the cellulose fibers is responsible for the highest contribution.
Concerning the WU impact category, the highest impact of the CfS is due to high amounts of insulation materials required to achieve the U-value target respect to the SwS. These results highlight that the bio-based insulation material allows to improve the environmental performance of the retrofit intervention examined in a wide range of impact categories in comparison with a conventional insulation material. However, further innovations are required to achieve improvements in the whole set of environmental impacts categories. The use of cellulose fibers for buildings energy retrofit allows to reduce the impact on climate change (GWP) by about 20% for 1970–1989 and 1990–2010 construction periods and by 12% for 1990–2010 construction period. Then, the use of cellulose fibers as insulation material can provide a positive contribution to meet climate change goals. However, they have a higher impact in terms of resources consumption compared to stone wool insulation material. In detail, the impacts on ADPm&m increase by about 150% for 1970–1989 and 1990–2010 construction periods and by 95% for 1990–2010 construction period in CfS compared to SwS. Resources’ consumption is a key indicator of the circular economy transition, then this is a crucial area of improvement for bio-based insulation material. Boric acid is the compound responsible for the largest contribution to ADPm&m, it is mainly produced from borate that is included in the 2020 list of Critical Raw Materials for the EU [35]. Then, the use of alternative flame retardant compounds, such as ammonium-based formulation [36], might be a more sustainable option in terms of resource depletion.
Figure 4 and Figure 5 illustrate the contribution analysis results of the different life cycle phases to the module B5 impacts in the case of buildings constructed between 1945 and 1969 in CfS and SwS, respectively. The contribution analysis results for 1970–1989 and 1990–2010 construction periods are reported in Appendix A (Figure A1, Figure A2, Figure A3 and Figure A4).
The analysis highlights that the gypsum plasterboard production contributes significantly to a wide range of impact categories in both CfS and SwS, for all the construction periods examined. In detail, it contributes to more than 45% in all the impact categories investigated, except for photochemical ozone formation (POF), particulate matter emissions (PM), human toxicity—non-cancer effects (HT-nce), human toxicity—cancer effects (HT-ce), AP, and ADPm&m. In addition, the EoL treatment of gypsum plasterboard is responsible for the largest contribution on acidification (AP) (about 80%), POF and PM (about 40%). In the CfS, gypsum plasterboard life cycle (production and EoL treatment) is responsible for a contribution to the B5 impacts ranging from a minimum value of 26% (for ADPm&m, 1945–1969 construction period) up to 93% (for AP, 1990–2010 construction period). In the SwS, gypsum plasterboard is responsible for a contribution to the B5 impacts ranging from a minimum value of 12% (for HT-ce and 1945–1969 construction period) up to 90% (for AP and 1990–2010 construction period).
Concerning the insulation materials, the contribution of the cellulose fibers production to the B5 module impacts is significant in the following impact categories:
  • ADPm&m (about 70% for 1945–1969 and 1970–1989 construction periods, and 56% for 1990–2010 construction period);
  • HT impact categories (HT-nce: about 35% for 1945–1969 and 1970–1989 construction periods and 24% for 1990–2010 construction period; HT-ce: about 40% for 1945–1969 and 1970–1989 construction periods, and 30% for 1990–2010 construction period);
  • LU (about 37% for 1945–1969 and 1970–1989 construction periods, and 25% for 1990–2010 construction period).
The contribution of stone wool production to the B5 module impacts is relevant for HT-ce, eutrophication aquatic freshwater EPFW, eutrophication terrestrial (EPT), and GWP. In detail, it contributes to more than 80% to HT-ce in all the construction periods examined. A deeper analysis highlights that the coke used in the production process is responsible for the largest contribution. Concerning EPFW and EPT impact categories the contribution is about 40% for 1945–1969 and 1970–1989 construction periods and 30% for 1990–2010 construction period. Finally, stone wool production accounts for about 40% of the GWP for 1945–1969 and 1970–1989 construction periods and 30% for 1990–2010 construction period. In CfS, transportation processes contribute less than 6% in almost all the impact categories, except for ozone depletion (ODP) and GWP, in which they account for about 14% and 8%, respectively. The highest contribution to GWP is given by the direct emissions related to the transportation process, while the largest contribution to ODP is related to the production process of the diesel consumed by lorry. In SwS, the transportation processes contribute for less than 6% in almost all the impact categories, except for ODP and ADPm&m in which they account for about 12%. The process responsible for the larger contribution to ADPm&m is associated to the lorry maintenance phase [34].

4.2. Life Cycle Impact Assessment and Interpretation: Comparison of the Retrofitted and the Non Retrofitted Building Apartments

According to goal 3 (Section 3.2.1), the scope of the LCA is extended to include the energy saving related to the retrofitted building apartment compared to the baseline building apartment. The LCIA results of the expanded system boundaries connected to the FUES (1 m2 of liveable floor per year) are reported in Table 5 and Table 6, respectively for CfS and SwS, the impacts of RBS are expressed as percentage variations respect to the impacts of BBS.
In RBS, the energy saved in the operational phase allows to improve the environmental performances of the retrofitted building apartment in almost all the examined categories compared to the BBS. The exceptions are:
  • AP, in which the impact in RBS increases by a minimum value equal to about 10% (for both CfS and SwS, 1945–1969) up to about 30% (for both CfS and SwS, 1990–2010);
  • ADPm&m, in which the impact in RBS increases by a minimum value equal to about 5% (for CfS, 1945–1969) up to about 14% (for CfS, 1990–2010);
  • Ionizing radiation (IR) and EPFW, in which the impact in RBS increases by about 6% for both CfS and SwS in 1990–2010 construction period;
  • HT-ce, in which the impact in RBS increases by 5% in SwS in 1990–2010 construction period;
  • WU, in which the contribution to the impact increases of about 5% in RBS.
In both RBS (CfS and SwS), the contribution to AP, ADPm&m, IR and HT-ce increases compared to BBS. This is due to the embodied impacts of the materials employed (B5 and C modules) that are higher than environmental benefits caused by the energy savings in the buildings operational phase. This outcome highlights the importance to assess the strategies planned towards the sustainable development through a life cycle perspective since analyses focused only on the operational phase could provide partial and misleading results.
Figure 6 and Figure 7 illustrate the contribution of each life cycle phase included within the expanded system boundaries (FUES) to the total impacts of the buildings realized in 1945–1969 construction period for CfS and SwS, respectively. The analysis highlights that the buildings operational phase contributes by more than 70% in all the impact categories examined. In the CfS, the retrofit intervention (B5) has a large impact only on AP (about 25%) and ADPm&m (about 20% for 1945–1969 and 1969–1989 construction periods, 14% for 1990–2010 construction period) categories. In the SwS, the B5 module causes large impacts on:
  • AP, in which it contributes for about 25% of the total impact in all the examined configurations;
  • HT-ce, in which it contributes for about 18% in the cases of buildings constructed in the 1945–1969 and 1969–1989 construction periods and for about 14% for those built in the 1990–2010 construction period.
The contribution analysis results for the other construction periods are reported in Appendix A (Figure A5 for CfS, 1970–1989; Figure A6 for CfS, 1990–2010, Figure A7 for SwS, 1970–1989 and Figure A8 for SwS, 1990–2010).
Concerning the energy and environmental benefits of the retrofit scenarios compared with the BBS, in both CfS and SwS higher values are obtained by retrofitting building apartments built in the 1945–1969 and 1970–1989 construction periods. In detail, the impact decreases by percentages ranging from a minimum value of about 16% (for EPT, 1970–1989) up to about 37% (for PM, 1945–1969) in all categories with the exceptions of IR and EPFW, in which the impacts decrease by less than 4% in both CfS and SwS. The energy and environmental benefits decrease in the case of buildings realized in the 1990–2010, since this building has higher performance compared with those realized in 1945–1969 and 1979–1989 construction periods. The energy savings achieved through the retrofit actions allow to reduce the impacts caused by the operational phase (B6 module) in almost all the categories except for WU, in which the impacts increase of a negligible percentage (lower than 3%) in retrofitted buildings due to the increased consumption of energy for cooling (Table 2). In the other categories the impacts associated with the B6 module decrease by an average percentage of about 28% for building belonging to 1945–1969 construction period, of about 24% for those built in the 1979–1989 construction period and finally of about 10% for those built in the 1990–2010 construction period. This result leads to a recommendation of giving priority to the oldest buildings in the retrofit schedule plan.

4.3. Payback Times

Table 7 shows the energy and environmental payback time indices of the retrofit action evaluated for both CfS and SwS. Data analysis highlights that in the CfS the energy and environmental impacts associated to the retrofit action can be repaid in less than 2 years in all the impact categories examined except for AP and ADPm&m., for which up to about 10 years and 6.5 years are needed. Concerning the SwS, the highest payback time indices are obtained in correspondence of HT-ce (up to about 5 years) and AP (up to about 10 years). In the other energy and environmental impact categories are repaid in less thar 3 years.

5. Conclusions

In the context of the building renovation wave initiative promoted by the European Commission, this research assesses the energy and environmental impacts related to the improvement of the thermal insulation of residential building apartments and to evaluate the achievable net benefits compared with non-retrofitted ones. Two different thermal insulation materials are examined and compared in a life cycle perspective: cellulose fibers (bio-based material) and stone wool (conventional insulation material). Apartments built in three different periods—1945–1969, 1970–1989, 1990–2010—are analyzed. The study highlights that the employment of the cellulose fibers as thermal insulation material causes lower impacts than those due to the employment of the stone wool in most of the energy and environmental categories investigated, with a percentage variation ranging from 4% to 154%. Retrofitting buildings with the bio-based insulation material allows for reducing the impact on global warming potential providing a positive contribution to meet climate change goals. In detail, the impact in this category decreases of percentage ranging from about 12% to 20% compared to stone wool use. However, cellulose fibers cause higher impact on depletion of abiotic resources—material and metals, which is a key indicator to measure the circularity of strategies. Therefore, it is paramount to identify more sustainable production route for cellulose fibers insulation material in terms of resource consumption.
The contribution analysis of the retrofit intervention clarifies that the substitution of the gypsum plasterboard layer affects for more than 50% the impacts to the categories examined, in both cellulose fibers and stone wool scenarios. Then, a significant reduction of the embodied impacts of the retrofit action investigated can be achieved by increasing the rate of recycled construction materials or identifying alternative design solution for building envelope.
The evaluation of the net energy and environmental benefits in the retrofitted building apartments compared with the non-retrofitted ones show that in both scenarios (cellulose fibers and stone wool), the energy saved in the operational phase can improve the environmental performance in most impact categories. The payback time indices evaluated show that the life cycle impacts related to the retrofit action are repaid in less than three years in most impact categories. Further efforts are required in order to achieve environmental benefits also in terms of acidification, depletion of abiotic resources (material and metals), ionizing radiation, freshwater ecotoxicity, human toxicity/cancer effects, and water use. An electricity mix characterized by a high share of renewables can allow to increase the energy and environmental benefits associated with retrofits. However, a strategy involving the production processes and the end-of-life treatments of the employed materials is recommended.
Concerning the buildings construction period, the research highlights that the proposed retrofit action is less effective for buildings of the 1990–2010 period. The oldest buildings have low thermophysical performance so higher net environmental benefits can be achieved relative to the retrofit target assumed.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, all authors; Methodology, all authors; Software, M.A.C. and T.M.G.; Validation, M.C. and M.M.; Formal analysis, M.A.C. and T.M.G.; Investigation, M.A.C. and T.M.G.; Resources, M.A.C. and T.M.G.; Data curation, all authors; Writing—original draft preparation, M.A.C.; Writing—review and editing, M.C. and M.M.; Visualization, M.A.C.; Supervision, M.C. and M.M. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Nomenclature

ADPm&mDepletion of abiotic resources—material and metals
APAcidification
BBSBaseline building
CEDCumulative energy demand
CfSCellulose fibers scenario
EEEmbodied energy
EEnrEmbodied energy, non-renewable
EErEmbodied energy, renewable
EFWEco-toxicity (freshwater)
EoLEnd-of-life
EPBDEnergy Performance of Buildings Directive
EPFWEutrophication aquatic freshwater
EPMEutrophication aquatic marine
EPTEutrophication terrestrial
EUEuropean Union
FUFunctional unit
FUESFunctional unit for life cycle impact saving assessment
FURFunctional unit for building envelope retrofit assessment
GHGGreenhouse gas
GWPClimate change—total
GWPbClimate change—biogenic
GWPfClimate change—fossil
GWPLULUCClimate change—land use and land use change
HT-ceHuman toxicity—cancer effects
HT-nceHuman toxicity—non-cancer effects
IRIonizing radiation—human health
LCALife cycle assessment
LULand use related impacts/Soil quality
MFHMulti-family house
nZEBNearly zero energy building
ODPOzone depletion
PMParticulate matter emissions
POFPhotochemical ozone formation
RBSRetrofitted buildings
SFHSingle-family houses
SwSStone wool scenario
UHeat transfer coefficient
WUWater use

Appendix A

Appendix A.1. Life Cycle Impact Assessment of the Retrofit Intervention

Figure A1 and Figure A2 illustrate the contribution analysis results of the different life cycle phases to the B5 module impacts in the case of buildings realized between 1970 and 1989 and between 1990 and 2010 in CfS, respectively.
Figure A1. Contribution of the different life cycle phases to the B5 module impacts—CfS (1970–1989).
Figure A1. Contribution of the different life cycle phases to the B5 module impacts—CfS (1970–1989).
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Figure A2. Contribution of the different life cycle phases to the B5 module impacts—CfS (1990–2010).
Figure A2. Contribution of the different life cycle phases to the B5 module impacts—CfS (1990–2010).
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Figure A3 and Figure A4 illustrate the contribution analysis results of the different life cycle phases to the B5 module impacts in the case of buildings realized between 1970 and 1989 and between 1990 and 2010 in SwS, respectively.
Figure A3. Contribution of the different life cycle phases to the B5 module impacts—SwS (1970–1989).
Figure A3. Contribution of the different life cycle phases to the B5 module impacts—SwS (1970–1989).
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Figure A4. Contribution of the different life cycle phases to the B5 module impacts—SwS (1990–2010).
Figure A4. Contribution of the different life cycle phases to the B5 module impacts—SwS (1990–2010).
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Appendix A.2. Life Cycle Impact Assessment: Comparison of the Retrofitted and Non-Retrofitted Buildings

Figure A5 and Figure A6 illustrate the contribution of each life cycle phase included within the expanded system boundaries (FUES) for CfS, for the buildings realized in 1970–1989 and in 1990–2010 construction periods, respectively.
Figure A5. Contribution of the different phases to the life cycle impacts—CfS (1970–1989).
Figure A5. Contribution of the different phases to the life cycle impacts—CfS (1970–1989).
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Figure A6. Contribution of the different phases to the life cycle impacts—CfS (1990–2010).
Figure A6. Contribution of the different phases to the life cycle impacts—CfS (1990–2010).
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Figure A7 and Figure A8 illustrate the contribution of each life cycle phase included within the expanded system boundaries (FUES) for SwS, for the buildings realized in 1970–1989 and in 1990–2010 construction periods, respectively.
Figure A7. Contribution of the different phases to the life cycle impacts—SwS (1970–1989).
Figure A7. Contribution of the different phases to the life cycle impacts—SwS (1970–1989).
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Figure A8. Contribution of the different phases to the life cycle impacts—CfS (1990–2010).
Figure A8. Contribution of the different phases to the life cycle impacts—CfS (1990–2010).
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Figure 1. Breakdown of the Italian residential building stock in 2010 (Own elaboration from Eurostat Database [23] and ODYSSEE-MURE Project: https://www.odyssee-mure.eu/publications/efficiency-trends-policies-profiles/italy-italian.html, accessed on 29 May 2021).
Figure 1. Breakdown of the Italian residential building stock in 2010 (Own elaboration from Eurostat Database [23] and ODYSSEE-MURE Project: https://www.odyssee-mure.eu/publications/efficiency-trends-policies-profiles/italy-italian.html, accessed on 29 May 2021).
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Figure 2. System boundary for FUR—retrofit action.
Figure 2. System boundary for FUR—retrofit action.
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Figure 3. System boundary for FUES—RBS versus BBS.
Figure 3. System boundary for FUES—RBS versus BBS.
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Figure 4. Contribution of the different life cycle phases to the B5 module impacts—CfS (1945–1969).
Figure 4. Contribution of the different life cycle phases to the B5 module impacts—CfS (1945–1969).
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Figure 5. Contribution of the different life cycle phases to the B5 module impacts—SwS (1945–1969).
Figure 5. Contribution of the different life cycle phases to the B5 module impacts—SwS (1945–1969).
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Figure 6. Contribution of the different phases to the life cycle impacts—CfS (1945–1969).
Figure 6. Contribution of the different phases to the life cycle impacts—CfS (1945–1969).
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Figure 7. Contribution of the different phases to the life cycle impacts—SwS (1945–1969).
Figure 7. Contribution of the different phases to the life cycle impacts—SwS (1945–1969).
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Table 1. Selected energy and environmental impact categories.
Table 1. Selected energy and environmental impact categories.
Impact CategoryUnitAcronym
Embodied energyMJEE
Embodied energy, non-renewableMJEEnr
Embodied energy, renewableMJEEr
Climate change—totalkg CO2eqGWP
Climate change—fossilkg CO2eqGWPf
Climate change—biogenickg CO2eqGWPb
Climate change—land use and land use changekg CO2eqGWPLULUC
Ozone depletionkg CFC − 11eqODP
Acidificationmol H+eqAP
Eutrophication aquatic freshwaterkg PO4eqEPFW
Eutrophication aquatic marinekg NeqEPM
Eutrophication terrestrialmolc NeqEPT
Photochemical ozone formationkg NMVOCeqPOF
Depletion of abiotic resources—material and metalskg SbeqADPm&m
Water usem3world eq. deprivedWU
Particulate matter emissionsDisease incidencePM
Ionizing radiation—human healthkBq U235eqIR
Eco-toxicity (freshwater)CTUeEFW
Human toxicity—non-cancer effectsCTUhHT-nce
Human toxicity—cancer effectsCTUhHT-ce
Land use related impacts/soil quality-LU
Table 2. Inventory list of materials and processes used for life cycle phases modeling (91.8 m2 of thermal insulated walls).
Table 2. Inventory list of materials and processes used for life cycle phases modeling (91.8 m2 of thermal insulated walls).
Life Cycle PhasesCellulose Fibers ScenarioStone Wool Scenario
1945–19691970–19891990–20101945–19691970–19891990–2010
Module B5
Insulation material (kg)326.51297.87177.58276.87262.55152.76
Gypsum plasterboard (kg)2214.952214.952214.952214.952214.952214.95
Material loss—insulation material (kg)12.5611.466.8310.6510.105.88
Material loss—gypsum
material (kg)
85.1985.1985.1985.1985.1985.19
Transportation to the
building site (tkm)
127.07125.64119.63124.59123.87118.89
Replaced material—gypsum plasterboard to EoL
treatment (kg)
2129.762129.762129.762129.762129.762129.76
Material losses to EoL
treatment (kg)
97.7596.6592.0295.8495.2991.07
Transportation of the
replaced material to the EoL treatment site (tkm)
106.49106.49106.49106.49106.49106.49
Transportation of the
material losses to the EoL treatment site (tkm)
4.894.834.604.794.764.55
Module B6
Heating—before retrofit (kWh/year)3853.113416.601781.413853.113416.601781.41
Cooling—before retrofit (kWh/year)705.53586.02820.22705.53586.02820.22
Heating—after retrofit (kWh/year)2295.732225.531382.092295.732225.531382.09
Cooling—after retrofit (kWh/year)734.25601.40852.72734.25601.40852.72
Module C
Transportation of the
insulation material to the EoL site (tkm)
15.7014.328.5413.3112.627.34
Insulation material to the EoL treatment (kg)313.96286.42170.75266.22252.45146.88
Table 3. Life cycle inventory datasets selected for life cycle phases modeling.
Table 3. Life cycle inventory datasets selected for life cycle phases modeling.
Module B5Ecoinvent 3.6 Dataset Used for LCI Modeling [34]
Cellulose fibers productionCellulose fiber, inclusive blowing in production
Stone wool productionStone wool production
Gypsum plasterboard productionGypsum plasterboard production
Transportation to the building siteTransport, freight, lorry 16–32 metric ton, EURO6
Replaced material—transportation to the EoL treatment siteTransport, freight, lorry 16–32 metric ton, EURO6
Cellulose fibers production loss EoL treatmentTreatment of inert waste, inert material landfill
Stone wool production loss EoL treatmentTreatment of waste mineral wool collection for final disposal
Replaced material EoL treatment—gypsum plasterboardTreatment of waste gypsum plasterboard collection for final disposal
Replaced material—transportation to the EoL treatment siteTransport, freight, lorry 16–32 metric ton, EURO6
Module B6Ecoinvent 3.6 Dataset Used for LCI Modeling
SolidsHeat production, hard coal coke, stove 5–15 kW
Liquefied petroleum gasHeat production, natural gas, at boiler modulating <100 kW
Gas/diesel oil incl. biofuelsHeat production, light fuel oil, at boiler 10 kW condensing, non-modulating
Gases incl. biogasHeat production, natural gas, at boiler modulating <100 kW
Biomass and wastesHeat production, mixed logs, at wood heater 6 kW
Derived heatHeat, district or industrial, other than natural gas
Advanced electric heatingHeat, air-water heat pump 10 kW
Conventional electric heatingElectricity, low voltage {IT}
Air conditioner (cooling)Electricity, low voltage {IT}
Module CEcoinvent 3.6 Dataset Used for LCI Modeling
Transportation of the insulation material to the EoL siteTransport, freight, lorry 16–32 metric ton, EURO6
EoL treatment—cellulose fiberTreatment of inert waste, inert material landfill
EoL treatment—stone woolTreatment of waste mineral wool collection for final disposal
Table 4. LCIA—retrofit action—cellulose fibers (Cf) and stone wool (Sw) scenarios—FUR: 1 m2 of vertical envelope.
Table 4. LCIA—retrofit action—cellulose fibers (Cf) and stone wool (Sw) scenarios—FUR: 1 m2 of vertical envelope.
Impact CategoryCfS
1945–1969
CfS
1970–1989
CfS
1990–2010
SwS
1945–1969
SwS
1970–1989
SwS
1990–2010
EE (MJ)4.524.444.034.984.864.28
EEnr (MJ)3.313.252.973.983.873.34
EEr (MJ)1.211.181.051.009.92 × 10−19.41 × 10−1
GWP (kg CO2eq)1.85 × 10−11.82 × 10−11.68 × 10−12.56 × 10−12.48 × 10−12.07 × 10−1
ODP (kg CFC−11eq)2.50 × 10−82.46 × 10−82.28 × 10−82.73 × 10−82.67 × 10−82.40 × 10−8
IR (kBq U235eq)3.50 × 10−23.45 × 10−23.21 × 10−23.78 × 10−23.71 × 10−23.36 × 10−2
POF (kg NMVOCeq)1.43 × 10−31.41 × 10−31.31 × 10−31.71 × 10−31.67 × 10−31.46 × 10−3
PM (Disease incidence)2.66 × 10−82.61 × 10−82.40 × 10−82.67 × 10−82.62 × 10−82.41 × 10−8
HT−nce (CTUh)3.67 × 10−93.57 × 10−93.07 × 10−93.70 × 10−93.59 × 10−93.08 × 10−9
HT−ce (CTUh)1.30 × 10−101.25 × 10−101.05 × 10−105.71 × 10−105.32 × 10−103.48 × 10−10
AP (mol H+eq)9.23 × 10−39.20 × 10−39.02 × 10−39.87 × 10−39.78 × 10−39.38 × 10−3
EPFW (kg PO4eq)6.61 × 10−56.45 × 10−55.66 × 10−58.16 × 10−57.87 × 10−56.52 × 10−5
EPM (kg Neq)3.46 × 10−43.40 × 10−43.08 × 10−43.63 × 10−43.55 × 10−43.17 × 10−4
EPT (mol Neq)3.66 × 10−33.59 × 10−33.24 × 10−34.57 × 10−34.43 × 10−33.74 × 10−3
EFW (CTUe)8.898.737.959.259.068.15
LU (−)5.655.494.704.164.113.88
WU (m3world eq. Deprived)7.51 × 10−27.32 × 10−26.38 × 10−27.23 × 10−27.06 × 10−26.23 × 10−2
ADPm&m (kg Sbeq)8.99 × 10−68.51 × 10−66.16 × 10−63.54 × 10−63.47 × 10−63.17 × 10−6
GWPf (kg CO2eq)2.09E × 10−12.05 × 10−11.87 × 10−12.70 × 10−12.61 × 10−12.20 × 10−1
GWPb (kg CO2eq)−2.44 × 10−2−2.36 × 10−2−1.96 × 10−2−1.40 × 10−2−1.40 × 10−2−1.40 × 10−2
Table 5. LCIA—expanded system boundaries—cellulose fibers scenarios (FUES: 1 m2 of walkable floor per year).
Table 5. LCIA—expanded system boundaries—cellulose fibers scenarios (FUES: 1 m2 of walkable floor per year).
Impact Category1945–19691970–19891990–2010
RBS(RBS-BBS)/BBSRBS(RBS-BBS)/BBSRBS(RBS-BBS)/BBS
EE (MJ)2.1 × 102−28.7%1.9 × 102−25.0%1.7 × 102−8.9%
EEnr (MJ)1.4 × 102−26.4%1.3 × 102−23.0%1.2 × 102−7.1%
EEr (MJ)7.1 × 101−32.9%6.7 × 101−28.5%5.2 × 101−12.8%
GWP (kg CO2eq)9.8−27.4%9.0−23.9%8.1−8.0%
ODP (kg CFC−11eq)1.1 × 10−6−25.0%1.0 × 10−6−21.9%9.3 × 10−7−6.2%
IR (kBq U235eq)5.7 × 10−1−4.1%4.9 × 10−1−2.9%5.9 × 10−15.7%
POF (kg NMVOCeq)4.1 × 10−2−32.5%3.9 × 10−2−27.8%3.0 × 10−2−11.5%
PM (Disease incidence)1.2 × 10−6−37.4%1.2 × 10−6−32.0%7.8 × 10−7−17.5%
HT-nce (CTUh)2.4 × 10−7−35.8%2.3 × 10−7−30.9%1.6 × 10−7−16.0%
HT-ce (CTUh)2.8 × 10−9−23.7%2.6 × 10−9−20.3%2.4 × 10−9−4.6%
AP (mol H+eq)3.8 × 10−28.3%3.5 × 10−214.0%3.7 × 10−228.2%
EPFW (kg PO4eq)1.3 × 10−3−3.2%1.1 × 10−3−2.4%1.3 × 10−35.0%
EPM (kg Neq)5.9 × 10−3−20.5%5.3 × 10−3−17.3%5.1 × 10−3−1.5%
EPT (mol Neq)7.1 × 10−2−19.3%6.3 × 10−2−16.4%6.3 × 10−2−1.3%
EFW (CTUe)1.7 × 102−28.5%1.6 × 102−24.1%1.3 × 102−7.1%
LU (−)1.3 × 102−33.0%1.2 × 102−28.1%9.1 × 101−12.1%
WU (m3world eq. Deprived)2.24.5%1.84.0%2.46.0%
ADPm&m (kg Sbeq)4.8 × 10−54.9%4.2 × 10−58.1%4.5 × 10−513.9%
GWPf (kg CO2eq)9.0−26.8%8.2−23.4%7.4−7.4%
GWPb (kg CO2eq)8.7 × 10−1−32.7%8.0 × 10−1−29.2%6.8 × 10−1−14.1%
GWPLULUC (kg CO2eq)5.7 × 10−3−32.6%5.4 × 10−3−27.2%3.9 × 10−3−10.3%
Table 6. LCIA—expanded system boundaries—stone wool scenarios (FUES: 1 m2 of walkable floor per year).
Table 6. LCIA—expanded system boundaries—stone wool scenarios (FUES: 1 m2 of walkable floor per year).
Impact Category1945—19691970—19891990—2010
RBS(RBS-BBS)/BBSRBS(RBS-BBS)/BBSRBS(RBS-BBS)/BBS
EE (MJ)2.1 × 102−28.5%1.9 × 102−24.8%1.7 × 102−8.8%
EEnr (MJ)1.4 × 102−26.0%1.3 × 102−22.6%1.2 × 102−6.8%
EEr (MJ)7.1 × 101−33.1%6.6 × 101−28.7%5.2 × 101−13.0%
GWP (kg CO2eq)9.9−26.8%9.1−23.4%8.1−7.6%
ODP (kg CFC−11eq)1.1 × 10−6−24.8%1.0 × 10−6−21.7%9.3 × 10−7−6.0%
IR (kBq U235eq)5.7 × 10−1−3.6%4.9 × 10−1−2.3%5.9 × 10−16.0%
POF (kg NMVOCeq)4.2 × 10−2−32.0%3.9 × 10−2−27.3%3.0 × 10−2−11.0%
PM (Disease incidence)1.2 × 10−6−37.4%1.2 × 10−6−32.0%7.8 × 10−7−17.5%
HT-nce (CTUh)2.4 × 10−7−35.8%2.3 × 10−7−30.9%1.6 × 10−7−16.0%
HT-ce (CTUh)3.3 × 10−9−11.5%3.0 × 10−9−7.4%2.6 × 10−95.5%
AP (mol H+eq)3.9 × 10−210.1%3.6 × 10−215.9%3.8 × 10−229.4%
EPFW (kg PO4eq)1.3 × 10−3−2.0%1.1 × 10−3−1.1%1.3 × 10−35.7%
EPM (kg Neq)5.9 × 10−3−20.3%5.3 × 10−3−17.0%5.1 × 10−3−1.3%
EPT (mol Neq)7.2 × 10−2−18.2%6.4 × 10−2−15.3%6.3 × 10−2−0.5%
EFW (CTUe)1.7 × 102−28.3%1.6 × 102−23.9%1.3 × 102−6.9%
LU (−)1.3 × 102−33.8%1.2 × 102−28.9%9.0 × 101−12.9%
WU (m3world eq. Deprived)2.24.4%1.83.9%2.45.9%
ADPm&m (kg Sbeq)4.2 × 10−5−7.3%3.7 × 10−5−5.1%4.1 × 10−56.1%
GWPf (kg CO2eq)9.1−26.3%8.3−22.8%7.4−7.0%
GWPb (kg CO2eq)8.8 × 10−1−31.8%8.0 × 10−1−28.4%6.8 × 10−1−13.4%
GWPLULUC (kg CO2eq)5.6 × 10−3−33.4%5.3 × 10−3−28.1%3.8 × 10−3−11.3%
Table 7. Energy and environmental payback times of the retrofit action—CfS and SwS.
Table 7. Energy and environmental payback times of the retrofit action—CfS and SwS.
Impact CategoryCfS
1945–1969
(Years)
CfS
1970–1989
(Years)
CfS
1990–2010
(Years)
SwS
1945–1969
(Years)
SwS
1970–1989
(Years)
SwS
1990–2010
(Years)
IPBT, EE0.470.530.670.520.580.71
IPBT, GWP0.420.470.590.580.650.72
IPBT, ODP0.530.600.710.570.650.74
IPBT, IR1.812.101.761.952.271.85
IPBT, POF0.720.801.190.850.951.33
IPBT, PM0.420.470.780.430.480.79
IPBT, HT—nce0.300.330.480.300.330.48
IPBT, HT—ce1.081.191.304.685.144.28
IPBT, AP7.919.189.508.459.789.87
IPBT, EPFW1.551.781.371.902.201.58
IPBT, EPM1.441.631.831.511.721.89
IPBT, EPT1.291.451.561.601.811.80
IPBT, EFW1.161.291.751.201.351.80
IPBT, LU0.890.981.390.660.741.15
IPBT, WU1.111.290.851.071.260.83
IPBT, ADPm&m6.036.624.792.392.762.49
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Cusenza, M.A.; Gulotta, T.M.; Mistretta, M.; Cellura, M. Life Cycle Energy and Environmental Assessment of the Thermal Insulation Improvement in Residential Buildings. Energies 2021, 14, 3452. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14123452

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Cusenza MA, Gulotta TM, Mistretta M, Cellura M. Life Cycle Energy and Environmental Assessment of the Thermal Insulation Improvement in Residential Buildings. Energies. 2021; 14(12):3452. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14123452

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Cusenza, Maria Anna, Teresa Maria Gulotta, Marina Mistretta, and Maurizio Cellura. 2021. "Life Cycle Energy and Environmental Assessment of the Thermal Insulation Improvement in Residential Buildings" Energies 14, no. 12: 3452. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14123452

APA Style

Cusenza, M. A., Gulotta, T. M., Mistretta, M., & Cellura, M. (2021). Life Cycle Energy and Environmental Assessment of the Thermal Insulation Improvement in Residential Buildings. Energies, 14(12), 3452. https://doi.org/10.3390/en14123452

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