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