Linkage-Based Frameworks for Sustainability Assessment: Making a Case for Driving Force-Pressure-State-Exposure-Effect-Action (DPSEEA) Frameworks
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Definition
1.2. Sustainable Development
2. Sustainability Metrics
Data/Variables | Indicators | Indices | Performance assessment criteria (C) | Objectives (O) | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Environment (O1) | Economics (O2) | Society (O3) | ||||
Basic data that can be directly measured or monitored. | Each performance indicator derived from aggregation of various basic parameters | Each performance criteria derived from aggregation of various indicators | Health (C1) | ∗ | ∗ | |
Safety (C2) | ∗ | ∗ | ||||
Economic development (C3) | ∗ | ∗ | ∗ | |||
Social equity (C4) | ∗ | ∗ | ||||
Environmental quality (C5) | ∗ | ∗ | ∗ | |||
Ecology (C6) | ∗ | |||||
Technical feasibility (C7) | ∗ | ∗ |
- ➢
- encompassing all relevant aspects of sustainability performance
- ➢
- non-overlapping (i.e., mutually exclusive)
- ➢
- easy to understand and interpret
- ➢
- as few in numbers as possible
- ➢
- verifiable
- ➢
- defined for a given time period, and
- ➢
- universal enough to be measured in diverse conditions.
Areas | Name of Index Approach | Categories |
---|---|---|
Innovative, knowledge and technology indices | Summary innovation index |
|
Development indices | Human development index (HDI) |
|
Index of sustainable and economic welfare |
| |
Market and economy-based indices | Green Net National Product (EDP) and System of integrated Environmental and Economic Accounting (SEEA) |
|
Eco-system based indices | Sustainability performance index (SPI) |
|
Eco-index methodology |
| |
Living Planet index |
| |
Ecological Footprint (EF) |
| |
Composite sustainability performance indices for industries | Composite Sustainable Development Index |
|
Composite Sustainability Performance index |
| |
G score method |
| |
ITT Flgyt Sustainability Index |
| |
Product-based sustainability indices | Life Cycle Index (LInx) |
|
Environmental indices for policies, nations and regions | Environmental Sustainability Index |
|
Environmental Quality Index |
| |
Environmental Performance Index |
| |
Environmental Vulnerability Index |
| |
Environmental indices for industries | Eco-indicator 99 |
|
Green Pro-1 [20-21] |
|
3. Sustainability Assessment Frameworks
- ➢
- Objective-based (e.g., strategic environmental assessment (SEA))
- ➢
- Impact-based (e.g., environmental impact assessment (EIA), sustainability impact assessment (SIA), TBL assessment)
- ➢
- Influence-based (e.g., Transport Canada framework [24])
- ➢
- Process-based or stakeholder-based (e.g., USDOE “Ten Steps to Sustainability” [25])
- ➢
- Material flow accounting and Life cycle assessment (e.g., LInX [26])
- ➢
- Linkages-based (e.g., pressure-state-response (PSR), driving force-pressure-state-impact-response ( DPSIR))
3.1. Objective-Based Frameworks
3.2. Impact-Based Frameworks
Frameworks | Main Features |
---|---|
Objective-based |
|
Impact-based |
|
Influence-based |
|
Process/stakeholder-based |
|
Material flow assessment/Life cycle assessment |
|
Linkage-based |
|
3.3. Influence-Based Frameworks
3.4. Process- or Stakeholder-Based Frameworks
3.5. Material Flow/Accounting and Life Cycle Assessment Framework
- ➢
- Define goal and scope helps to understand the purpose and the scope of the study and requires using system boundaries.
- ➢
- Inventory analysis accounts for energy and raw material and discharges from all activities, products, and processes.
- ➢
- Impact analysis determines the environmental impacts due to activities, products, and processes.
- ➢
- Improvement assessment identifies the possibilities for improving the performance of the system.
3.6. Linkage-Based Frameworks
4. Types of Linkage-Based Frameworks
4.1. Pressure-State-Response
4.2. Driver-Pressure-State-Impact-Response
4.3. Driving Force-Pressure-State-Exposure-Effects-Action (DPSEEA)
5. Proposed Integrated Framework for Sustainability Assessment
- ➢
- It cannot work effectively if the evidence for causal linkages is missing or vague
- ➢
- It leads to oversimplification of spatial and temporal interactions that results in poorly informed management decisions
- ➢
- It oversimplifies inter-linkages among issues and factors. Often, it is ambiguous as to whether the issue measured by an indicator represents a driving force or a pressure. Sometimes there are multiple pressures for most states, and multiple states arising from most pressures, creating difficulties in identifying indicators.
6. Linkage-Based Frameworks: An Example of Universities
7. Discussion and Conclusions
DPSEEA | DPSIR | PSR | Factors |
---|---|---|---|
Driving force | Driver | N/A |
|
Pressure | Pressure | Pressure |
|
State | State | State |
|
Exposure | N/A | N/A |
|
Effect | Impact |
| |
Action | Response | Response |
|
Acknowledgements
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Waheed, B.; Khan, F.; Veitch, B. Linkage-Based Frameworks for Sustainability Assessment: Making a Case for Driving Force-Pressure-State-Exposure-Effect-Action (DPSEEA) Frameworks. Sustainability 2009, 1, 441-463. https://doi.org/10.3390/su1030441
Waheed B, Khan F, Veitch B. Linkage-Based Frameworks for Sustainability Assessment: Making a Case for Driving Force-Pressure-State-Exposure-Effect-Action (DPSEEA) Frameworks. Sustainability. 2009; 1(3):441-463. https://doi.org/10.3390/su1030441
Chicago/Turabian StyleWaheed, Bushra, Faisal Khan, and Brian Veitch. 2009. "Linkage-Based Frameworks for Sustainability Assessment: Making a Case for Driving Force-Pressure-State-Exposure-Effect-Action (DPSEEA) Frameworks" Sustainability 1, no. 3: 441-463. https://doi.org/10.3390/su1030441
APA StyleWaheed, B., Khan, F., & Veitch, B. (2009). Linkage-Based Frameworks for Sustainability Assessment: Making a Case for Driving Force-Pressure-State-Exposure-Effect-Action (DPSEEA) Frameworks. Sustainability, 1(3), 441-463. https://doi.org/10.3390/su1030441