Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8106449 | Journal of Cleaner Production | 2014 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
Coffee is an important global beverage, and has received significant attention especially in terms of the social and environmental sustainability of its production. This paper calculates the product carbon footprint (PCF) and conducts an analysis of energy usage for six alternative coffee products. The analysis shows that espresso coffee had the lowest impact (0.13 kWh and 49Â g CO2 per serve), while canned coffee provided the highest impact (0.76Â kWh and 223Â g CO2 per serve). The latte had the second highest embodied energy impact, with 0.54Â kWh and the highest PCF of 224Â g CO2 per serve. On a per millilitre basis however, espresso coffee provided the highest impact (0.0048Â kWh/mL and 0.8Â g CO2-eq/mL), followed by canned coffee and the latte. This indicates that care must be used in the selection of an appropriate functional unit, as the ranking of PCF can be overturned according to the basis of comparison. The highest contributing factors were the emissions from milk, packaging (for the can) and the production stages of the green coffee beans. Despite only holding around 17% of the market share of consumed coffee, the canned coffee product contributes around half of the national carbon footprint from coffee consumption. Current commercial incentives for consumers to use their own cups were compared to carbon taxation and found to value carbon approximately three orders of magnitude higher than carbon market rates.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Energy
Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
Authors
H.A. Hassard, M.H. Couch, T. Techa-erawan, B.C. McLellan,