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  LIFE CYCLE 
  ANALYSISA.S. Ramakrishna
 
 With growing 
  concern about environmental impacts associated with rapid industrialisation, a 
  number of environmental assessment tools have been developed.  Life Cycle 
  Analysis (LCA) is one such tool which has been used for more than 25 years in 
  the developed countries and has recently made inroads into the developing 
  countries.
 
 LCA evaluates the environmental 
  burdens associated with a particular product by taking into account the entire 
  life cycle of the product, beginning from raw material acquisition, 
  processing, manufacturing and consumption to final disposal and reuse.  The 
  environmental inputs and outputs are identified for every stage and summed up 
  to find the total impact associated with a product.
 
 LCA is carried out in three stages beginning with the preparation of a Life 
  Cycle Inventory (LCI) which requires quantification in physical units of all 
  the environmental inputs that go into making a product, such as energy, raw 
  material and so on.  This is followed by Impact Analysis which converts the 
  physical units into impacts on environment, human health etc.  Based on this 
  analysis, LCA enters into the stage of Improvement Analysis where it suggests 
  changes or improvements in the different activities during the life cycle of a 
  product.  In other words, the aim of LCA is to quantify the environmental 
  impacts during each stage of a product manufacture and suggest changes to 
  mitigate the adverse impacts.
 
 The tools holds great potential for use in polluting industries like soaps 
  detergents and dyes and those dealing with recycled products like plastic, 
  glass and metals.  At the same time, it can be used by any industry to 
  streamline its upstreams and downstream processes.
 
 LCA studies can also be used to guide consumers to make better purchasing 
  decisions and, to manufacturers for developing products that make less demands 
  on the environment.  Finally, LCA can be used by government for 
  ‘eco-labelling’ of products and services.
 
 At Development Alternatives, a beginning has been made by using the LCA for 
  estimating the energy input and output for the construction sector in India.  
  The ultimate aim to suggest interventions - technological and institutional - 
  which have  a high impact in terms of energy input reduction per unit of 
  service provided.
 
 
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