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What is a life cycle assessment?

A life cycle assessment (LCA) measures the environmental impact of a product, process, or service throughout its full life, from raw materials to disposal.

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What is a life cycle assessment?

A life cycle assessment (LCA) provides a comprehensive view of how a product affects the environment at each stage of its life. This includes sourcing raw materials, production, distribution, usage, and what happens after the product's useful life ends.

For example, consider a cotton t-shirt. An LCA would assess water and energy use during cotton farming, emissions during manufacturing, transportation-related impacts, washing and drying over time, and how it’s disposed of—landfilled, incinerated, or recycled. These insights help businesses identify where they can reduce resource use and environmental harm while designing more sustainable products.

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What is a life cycle assessment

Who needs an LCA and why?

LCA is valuable for organizations across various industries aiming to:

Industries such as manufacturing, construction, energy, and consumer goods often utilize LCA to inform decision-making and drive sustainable practices.

Understanding product life cycle in LCA

The product life cycle encompasses all phases a product undergoes:

By assessing each phase, LCA identifies environmental impacts and opportunities for improvement.

The four phases of a life cycle assessment

An LCA comprises four main phases:

  1. Goal and scope definition
    Establishes the purpose, system boundaries, and level of detail of the study. This phase defines what will be assessed and sets the context for the analysis.
  2. Life cycle inventory (LCI)
    This phase involves data collection on energy and material inputs and environmental releases. It quantifies the inputs and outputs associated with the product system.
  3. Life cycle impact assessment (LCIA)
    Evaluates the potential environmental impacts using the LCI data. This phase translates data into environmental impact indicators.
  4. Interpretation
    Analyzes results to draw conclusions, explain limitations, and provide recommendations. This phase ensures that the findings are consistent with the defined goals and scope.
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Common criticisms of life cycle assessments

While a life cycle assessment is a well-regarded tool for sustainability decision-making, it’s not without limitations. Understanding these helps organizations interpret LCA results more accurately and improve future assessments.

Overcoming these challenges requires improved access to high-quality data, scalable digital tools, and clear communication of LCA limitations to stakeholders.

How to start your own life cycle assessment

Starting an LCA doesn't have to be overwhelming. By following a structured approach, organizations can build a solid foundation for more sustainable decisions:

  1. Define goals and scope
    Clarify why you're conducting the LCA, whether it's to reduce emissions, inform product design, or meet regulatory requirements. Set boundaries around what parts of the life cycle you'll assess and establish a clear functional unit for analysis.
  2. Collect relevant data Gather quantitative data on raw material use, energy consumption, transportation, emissions, and waste. The quality and completeness of this data will directly affect the accuracy of your results.
  3. Conduct an impact assessment Translate raw data into environmental impact categories, such as carbon footprint, water use, or resource depletion, using a recognized methodology.
  4. Interpret the results Identify hotspots where environmental impacts are highest and explore opportunities for reduction or redesign. Insights from LCA can directly support a circular economy strategy, where materials are reused, waste is minimized, and sustainability is built into product lifecycles.
  5. Communicate and take action Share results in a clear and actionable way for stakeholders. Use insights to inform sustainability reporting, product innovation, or supply chain improvements.

Purpose-built sustainability software can help ensure your LCA delivers meaningful, decision-ready insights.

With the right capabilities, digital tools can transform LCA from a technical task into a strategic advantage.

SAP Responsible Design and Production helps organizations integrate LCA insights directly into business processes. It also supports compliance with circular models like extended producer responsibility, enabling businesses to track material flows and meet post-consumer accountability standards.

Each of these tools plays a role in making an LCA more efficient, consistent, and actionable. Explore these tools and see them in action.

What to look for in tools to support a life cycle assessment

Digital tools can make a life cycle assessment more accessible, scalable, and decision ready. The right solution should help streamline every phase, from data collection to reporting, while integrating into your broader sustainability and product strategy.

Key capabilities to consider include:

FAQs

What is an example of a life cycle assessment?
An LCA of a plastic bottle would assess environmental impacts from raw material extraction (petroleum), manufacturing, distribution, usage, and end-of-life disposal or recycling.
What are the four stages of an LCA?
  1. Goal and scope definition
  2. Life cycle inventory (LCI)
  3. Life cycle impact assessment (LCIA)
  4. Interpretation
How long does a life cycle assessment take?
The duration varies based on complexity, ranging from a few weeks for simple products to several months for complex systems.
What industries use a life cycle assessment?
Industries such as manufacturing, construction, energy, and consumer goods utilize LCAs to enhance sustainability and comply with environmental regulations.
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