Life Cycle Assessment of the Closed-Loop Recycling of Used Disposable Diapers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Objective
2.2. Scope of This Study
2.2.1. Overview of Key New Technologies for Closed-Loop Recycling
2.2.2. Functional Unit
2.2.3. System Boundary
2.2.4. Impact Categories
2.3. Inventory Analysis
2.3.1. Data Collection
2.3.2. Background Data and Software
3. Results
3.1. LCA Results and Comparison between the Three Scenarios
3.1.1. Global Warming
3.1.2. Land Use Occupation
3.1.3. Water Consumption
3.2. Detailed LCA Results at Recycling, Waste Treatment Stage of the Recycling Model
3.2.1. Global Warming
3.2.2. Land Use Occupation
3.2.3. Water Consumption
4. Discussion
4.1. Comparison with Previous Studies
- The system boundaries are not always the same in studies, such as the inclusion of the collection/transport process.
- Individual studies may use different background databases, resulting in different environmental loads, even with the same inventory.
- The composition of used paper diapers (material composition of used paper diapers, the ratio of excretion in paper diapers, etc.) differs by study, which results in, for example, a different yield in recycled products, even with the same recycling ratio.
- The suitability of recycled products is not sufficiently assessed. If recycled products substitute virgin materials in equal amounts, the quality of the former should be sufficiently verified. It is also necessary to assess the market demand. Sufficient information on these matters cannot be obtained from a comparison with previous studies.
- Values not provided in the report by Fujiyama et al. were directly measured using a chart, which may have errors.
4.2. Estimation of the Potential for Environmental Load Reduction
- No comparative study on costs has been conducted, so it is uncertain if economic rationality is achieved in all regions.
- It is uncertain if a system to recover used paper diapers for recycling facilities can be established, as the disposal methods for used paper diapers differ by nation or region.
- It is uncertain if the destinations for using recycled products can be established in all regions.
5. Conclusions
- Japanese data were used for LCA calculations.
- Thermal coal and electricity were set as alternative products for the recycling effect. However, if these are changed to other products, the recycling effect may change.
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Quality Inspection Items | Criteria | Inspection Results | |
---|---|---|---|
Purity | Appearance and Properties | Color is white, no odor, no foreign substances | conform |
Color elution | No color is exhibited when observing the eluate from above and from the side | conform | |
pH | 4.5~8 | conform | |
Fluorescence | No fluorescence | conform | |
Ash content | 0.65% or less | conform | |
Kjeldahl nitrogen | 50 mg/kg or less | conform | |
Cleanliness | Bacteria | Not more than 1000 per 1 gram | conform |
Escherichia coli | Not detected | conform |
Materials | Composition Ratio (%) | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Average | for Adult | for Infant | ||
Pulp | 40.9 | 52.2 | 33.3 | |
SAP | 27.9 | 19.8 | 33.3 | |
Plastics | Polyethylene | 6.2 | 5.6 | 6.7 |
Polypropylene | 18.7 | 16.8 | 20.0 | |
Polystyrene | 6.2 | 5.6 | 6.7 | |
Total | 100.0 | 100.0 | 100.0 |
Type | Production Weight (tonne) | Production Quantity (1000 pieces) | Average Weight (g) |
---|---|---|---|
for Adult | 365,804 | 5,864,108 | 62.4 |
for Infant | 484,079 | 15,094,904 | 32.1 |
Total | 849,883 | 20,959,012 | 40.5 |
Composition | Weight (kg) | Composition Ratio (%) | |
---|---|---|---|
Paper diaper | 383 | 38.3 | |
Collection bag made of polyethylene | 4 | 0.4 | |
Human excreta | Moisture content | 598 | 61.3 |
Solid content | 15 | ||
Total | 1000 | 100.0 |
Scenario | Abbreviations in This Study | Life Cycle Stage | |
---|---|---|---|
Raw Materials Acquisition ~ Production ~ Distribution ~ Use | Recycling, Waste Treatment | ||
Recycling | RE | Common for all scenarios | Recycling |
Landfill | LF | Landfilling | |
Incineration | IN | Incineration |
Scenario | Recycled Products | Alternative Criteria | Alternative Products |
---|---|---|---|
RE | Pulp | Mass equivalent | NBKP |
SAP | Mass equivalent | SAP | |
RPF | Heat value equivalent | Thermal coal | |
LF | (none) | - | - |
IN | Electricity | Electric power equivalent | Public power |
Impact Category | Unit | Evaluation Method |
---|---|---|
Global warming | kg-CO2e | IPCC 2013 GWP 100a |
Land use occupation | m2a | LIME2 [20] |
Water consumption (blue water) | m3 | water consumption inventory |
Life Cycle Stage | Data Item | Data Type | Collected Data | Data Collection Method |
---|---|---|---|---|
Raw materials acquisition | Input amount of various raw materials | foreground | Pulp, SAP, Film, Non-woven fabric, others | Collected from Unicharm’s paper diaper factory |
Production | Energy consumption | foreground | Electricity | |
Waste amount | foreground | Residue material | ||
Recycling, waste treatment | Input amount of Energy, utilities and auxiliary materials | foreground | Electricity, LPG, Industrial water, Organic acid, others | Demonstration experiment data |
Pulp recycling rate | foreground | 80% | ||
SAP recycling rate | foreground | 80% | ||
Plastics recycling rate | foreground | 100% | ||
RPF heat value | foreground | 36.3 MJ/kg |
Life Cycle Stage | Transport Object | Transport Route | Distance | Mode of Transportation |
---|---|---|---|---|
Raw materials acquisition | Raw materials and auxiliary for paper diapers | Domestic land transportation | 500 km | 10 t truck, loading ratio of 50% |
Ocean freight (From North America to Japan) | 18,707 km | Container transport ship, >4000 TEU | ||
Distribution | Product (paper diaper) | Domestic land transportation | 555 km | 10 t truck, loading ratio of 50% |
Recycling, waste treatment | Used paper diaper | Domestic land transportation | 100 km | 2 t truck, loading ratio of 50% |
Auxiliary materials | 200 km | |||
Waste | 100 km |
Scenario | Global Warming | Land Use Occupation | Water Consumption | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
(g-CO2e) | (cm2a) | (L) | |||
RE | Recycling | 99 | 139 | 0.354 | |
Reduction rate | IN Δ | 39% | 71% | 22% | |
LF Δ | 47% | 71% | 21% | ||
IN | Incineration | 162 | 474 | 0.453 | |
LF | Landfill | 187 | 474 | 0.446 |
Process | Process ID | Global Warming | Land Use Occupation | Water Consumption | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
(g-CO2e) | (cm2a) | (L) | |||
Collection and transport | Collection and transport | (a) | 7.83 | 1.48 | 0.00282 |
Crushing, washing, and separation | Crushing, washing, and separation | (b) | 9.63 | 39.7 | 0.182 |
Waste water and sludge treatment | (c, e) | 9.53 | 0.320 | 0.00143 | |
Organic acid recovery | (d) | 3.68 | 0.0628 | 0.000298 | |
Recycled product production | Ozone treatment | (f) | 5.55 | 0.104 | 0.00100 |
SAP reactivation | (g) | 17.0 | 0.307 | 0.00243 | |
RPF production and combustion | (h, i) | 47.2 | 0.233 | 0.00252 | |
Subtotal-1, (a)~(i) | 100 | 42.2 | 0.192 | ||
Avoided products | NBKP production | (j) | –18.8 | –375 | –0.100 |
SAP production | (k) | –19.7 | –0.324 | –0.180 | |
Thermal coal production and combustion | (l, m) | –58.7 | –0.00654 | –0.000690 | |
Subtotal-2, (j)~(m) | –97.2 | –376 | –0.281 | ||
Total | 3.18 | 333 | –0.0886 |
Comparative Studies | GHG Emissions (kg-CO2e) | Recycled Products | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Collection and Transport | Recycling, Waste Treatment | Recycling Effect | Total | ||
This study | |||||
Recycling | 74 | 875 | –919 | 30 | Pulp (127 kg) SAP (91 kg) RPF (155 kg) |
Incineration | 74 | 579 | –55 | 598 | Electricity (91 kWh) |
Landfill | 74 | 764 | 0 | 838 | (None) |
Comparative studies | |||||
Itsubo et al. [8] | |||||
Recycling | 55 | 1132 | –821 | 366 | Pulp (89 kg) RPF (306 kg) |
Incineration | 55 | 523 | –85 | 493 | Electricity (137 kWh) |
Fujiyama et al. [6] | |||||
Recycling | (out of boundary) | 530 | –240 | 290 | Pulp (159 kg) Fermented fertilizer |
Incineration | (out of boundary) | 432 | (none) | 432 | (None) |
Unit | Incineration | Landfill | Total Amount of Reduction per Year | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Current Estimates | Apply Recycling | Current Estimates | Apply Recycling | ||||
Japan | |||||||
Paper diaper production | Mt/year | 0.878 | - | ||||
Disposal volume | Mt/year | 2.294 | - | ||||
Ratio of disposal method | % | 98% | 2% | - | |||
Amount by disposal method | Mt/year | 2.248 | 0.046 | - | |||
Environmental load per year | - | ||||||
Global warming | Mt-CO2e | 1.344 | 0.068 | 0.038 | 0.001 | 1.314 | |
Land use occupation | km2a | 4 | –708 | 0.1 | 14 | 726 | |
Water consumption | Mm3 | 0.222 | –1.881 | 0.006 | –0.038 | 2.149 | |
Global | |||||||
Paper diaper production | Mt/year | 4.866 | - | ||||
Disposal volume | Mt/year | 12.720 | - | ||||
Ratio of disposal method | % | 37% | 63% | - | |||
Amount by disposal method | Mt/year | 4.706 | 8.014 | - | |||
Environmental load per year | - | ||||||
Global warming | Mt-CO2e | 2.814 | 0.142 | 6.712 | 0.241 | 9.143 | |
Land use occupation | km2a | 8 | –1482 | 13 | –2524 | 4027 | |
Water consumption | Mm3 | 0.466 | –3.938 | 1.111 | –6.706 | 12.221 |
This Study | Other Recycling Technologies | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
System Boundary | Impact Category | Reduction Rate | ||
Compared with Incineration | Compared with Landfill | |||
Full life cycle * | Global warming | 39% | 47% | Previous studies in Japan have not evaluated the full life cycle. |
Land use occupation | 71% | 71% | ||
Water consumption | 22% | 21% | ||
Recycling, waste treatment stage | Global warming | 95% | 96% | Itsubo et al. [9] reported a 26% reduction, and Fujiyama et al. [6] reported a 33% reduction in GHG emissions. |
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Itsubo, N.; Wada, M.; Imai, S.; Myoga, A.; Makino, N.; Shobatake, K. Life Cycle Assessment of the Closed-Loop Recycling of Used Disposable Diapers. Resources 2020, 9, 34. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources9030034
Itsubo N, Wada M, Imai S, Myoga A, Makino N, Shobatake K. Life Cycle Assessment of the Closed-Loop Recycling of Used Disposable Diapers. Resources. 2020; 9(3):34. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources9030034
Chicago/Turabian StyleItsubo, Norihiro, Mitsuhiro Wada, Shigeo Imai, Akira Myoga, Naoki Makino, and Koichi Shobatake. 2020. "Life Cycle Assessment of the Closed-Loop Recycling of Used Disposable Diapers" Resources 9, no. 3: 34. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources9030034
APA StyleItsubo, N., Wada, M., Imai, S., Myoga, A., Makino, N., & Shobatake, K. (2020). Life Cycle Assessment of the Closed-Loop Recycling of Used Disposable Diapers. Resources, 9(3), 34. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources9030034