Categories
Carbon Footprint (CF)
The carbon footprint (CF), or also referred to as the GHG footprint, deals with the carbon component and accounts for anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions associated with the production of goods or services, a specific event or an entire organisation, depending on the aim. Inconsistent terminology is also a concern here, with some authors calling it “carbon accounting”, even if they determined a carbon footprint. The carbon footprint method should also not be confused with GHG accounting, which is an inventorying of emissions, at least in the publications that were reviewed for this report. Adding to the confusion is that carbon is sometimes used as a catch all term for GHG emissions, such as carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide, which are all expressed in carbon dioxide (CO2) equivalents.
The analysis of a CF “follows the same basic modeling principals as the EF, but only considers the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions for the evaluation of the environmental impacts” (Beloin-Saint-Pierre et al. 2016). There are three main accounting approaches for GHG emissions on the city scale, which are 1) territorial (geographic)-based, 2) trans-boundary community-wide infrastructure and 3) consumption-based accounting (Chavez and Ramaswami 2013). The territorial approach, also called production-based (PB) accounting, “measures emissions generated in the place where goods and services are produced. However, the growth of emissions embodied in trade has raised the question whether we should switch to, or amalgamate PB accounting, with other accounting approaches. Consumption‐based (CB) accounting has so far emerged as the most prominent alternative. This approach accounts for emissions at the point of consumption, attributing all the emissions that occurred in the course of production and distribution to the final consumers of goods and services“ (Afionis et al. 2017) and uses household expenditure data most often, although input-output tables adjusted from national to urban scales are also used (Ramaswami et al. 2011). The trans‐boundary infrastructure supply chain footprint (TBIF) was developed by Ramaswami et al. (2008) and is a demand-centered hybrid LCA-based inventory method for GHG emissions of cities. “The TBIF method utilizes the concept of scopes from corporate GHG emissions accounting protocols to include both in‐boundary and trans‐boundary GHG emissions associated with key community‐wide activities; hence it has also been referred to as an expanded geographic inventory or a community‐wide infrastructure GHG footprint. The TBIF method recognizes that cities include both producers and consumers, and focuses on infrastructure supply chains that serve the entire community as a whole. The GHG emissions accounted for by the TBIF method are (1) direct in‐boundary GHG emissions (scope 1), (2) indirect GHG emissions from the generation of purchased electricity (scope 2), and (3) GHG emissions from essential trans‐boundary infrastructures serving cities (scope 3), such as water supply, transportation fuels, airline and commuter travel, and other critical supply chains. The inclusion of trans‐boundary infrastructures (scope 3) warrants careful allocation of GHGs to avoid double counting (Ramaswami et al. 2008)” (Chavez et al. 2012).
Publications
Title | Type | Author(s) | Year |
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Analysis of urban metabolism and policy assessment : building a nested multiregional input-output model | Thesis | BRAMBILLA di CIVESIO and BURATTI BRAMBILLA di CIVESIO, ALBERTO; BURATTI, DAVIDE | 2019 |
Household carbon footprint patterns by the degree of urbanisation in Europe | Journal Article | Ottelin et al. Juudit Ottelin, Jukka Heinonen, Jonas Nässén, Seppo Junnila | 2019 |
An Urban Metabolism and Carbon Footprint Analysis of the Jing-Jin-Ji Regional Agglomeration | Journal Article | Zheng et al. Zheng, Hongmei and Fath, Brian D. and Zhang, Yan | 2017 |
Comprehensive evaluation on industrial & urban symbiosis by combining MFA, carbon footprint and emergy methods—Case of Kawasaki, Japan | Journal Article | Ohnishi et al. Satoshi Ohnishi and Huijuan Dong and Yong Geng and Minoru Fujii and Tsuyoshi Fujita | 2017 |
City Carbon Footprint Networks | Journal Article | Chen et al. Chen, Guangwu and Wiedmann, Thomas and Hadjikakou, Michalis and Rowley, Haze | 2016 |
Surveying the Environmental Footprint of Urban Food Consumption | Journal Article | Goldstein et al. Goldstein, Benjamin and Birkved, Morten and Fernández, John and Hauschild, Michael | 2016 |
The Concept of City Carbon Maps: A Case Study of Melbourne, Australia | Journal Article | Wiedmann et al. Wiedmann, Thomas O. and Chen, Guangwu and Barrett, John | 2016 |
Transnational city carbon footprint networks - Exploring carbon links between Australian and Chinese cities | Journal Article | Chen et al. Guangwu Chen and Thomas Wiedmann and Yafei Wang and Michalis Hadjikakou | 2016 |
Urban carbon transformations: unravelling spatial and inter-sectoral linkages for key city industries based on multi-region input-output analysis | Journal Article | Chen et al. Guangwu Chen and Michalis Hadjikakou and Thomas Wiedmann | 2016 |
Analysis of the energy metabolism of urban socioeconomic sectors and the associated carbon footprints: Model development and a case study for Beijing | Journal Article | Zhang et al. Zhang, Yan; Zheng, Hongmei; Fath, Brian D. | 2014 |
Carbon footprints of cities and other human settlements in the UK | Journal Article | Minx et al. Minx, Jan; Baiocchi, Giovanni; Wiedmann, Thomas; Barrett, John; Creutzig, Felix; Feng, Kuishuang; Förster, Michael; Pichler, Peter-Paul; Weisz, Helga; Hubacek, Klaus | 2013 |
Consumption based footprint of a city | Conference Paper | Worbe et al. Sébastien Worbe, Aurélie Gallice, Anne Flesch, Fanny Tarrisse-Vicard, Séverine Mehier | 2013 |
Implementing Trans-Boundary Infrastructure-Based Greenhouse Gas Accounting for Delhi, India | Journal Article | Abel Chavez and Kumar Abel Chavez, Anu Ramaswami, Dwarakanath Nath, Ravi Guru, and Emani Kumar | 2012 |
Greenhouse Gas Emission Footprints and Energy Use Benchmarks for Eight U.S. Cities | Journal Article | Hillman and Ramaswami Hillman, Tim; Ramaswami, Anu | 2010 |
Twelve metropolitan carbon footprints: A preliminary comparative global assessment | Journal Article | Sovacool and Brown Sovacool, Benjamin K.; Brown, Marilyn A. | 2010 |