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  1. The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment
  2. The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 20
  3. The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 20, Issue 8, August 2015
  4. Redefining scope: the true environmental impact of smartphones?
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The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 22
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 21
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 20
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 20, Issue 12, December 2015
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 20, Issue 11, November 2015
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 20, Issue 10, October 2015
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 20, Issue 9, September 2015
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 20, Issue 8, August 2015
Organizational LCA: the new member of the LCA family—introducing the UNEP/SETAC Life Cycle Initiative guidance document
Cumulative exergy demand analysis of the primary aluminum produced in China and its natural resource-saving potential in transportation
Life cycle assessment of organic paddy rotation systems using land- and product-based indicators: a case study in Japan
Comparative life cycle assessment of an innovative CSP air-cooled system and conventional condensers
Life cycle inventory processes of the integrated steel plant (ISP) in Krakow, Poland—coke production, a case study
Well-to-wheel analysis on greenhouse gas emission and energy use with petroleum-based fuels in Korea: gasoline and diesel
Demonstrating an approach for including pesticide use in life-cycle assessment: Estimating human and ecosystem toxicity of pesticide use in Midwest corn farming
A comparative LCA of an electric vehicle and an internal combustion engine vehicle using the appropriate power mix: the Italian case study
Facility arrangements and the environmental performance of disposable and reusable cups
Determining the principal references of the social life cycle assessment of products
A social life cycle assessment model for building construction in Hong Kong
Redefining scope: the true environmental impact of smartphones?
Erratum to: Modelling spatially explicit impacts from phosphorus emissions in agriculture
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 20, Issue 7, July 2015
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 20, Issue 6, June 2015
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 20, Issue 5, May 2015
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 20, Issue 4, April 2015
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 20, Issue 3, March 2015
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 20, Issue 2, February 2015
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 20, Issue 1, January 2015
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 19
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 18
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 17
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 16
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 15
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 14
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 13
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 12
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 11
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 10
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 9
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 8
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 7
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 6
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 5
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 4
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 3
The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment : Volume 2

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Redefining scope: the true environmental impact of smartphones?

Content Provider Springer Nature Link
Author Suckling, James Lee, Jacquetta
Copyright Year 2015
Abstract The aim of this study is to explore the literature surrounding the environmental impact of mobile phones and the implications of moving from the current business model of selling, using and discarding phones to a product service system based upon a cloud service. The exploration of the impacts relating to this shift and subsequent change in scope is explored in relation to the life cycle profile of a typical smartphone.A literature study is conducted into the existing literature in order to define the characteristics of a “typical” smartphone. Focus is given to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in different life cycle phases in line with that reported in the majority of literature. Usage patterns from literature are presented in order to show how a smartphone is increasingly responsible for not only data consumption but also data generation. The subsequent consequences of this for the balance of the life cycle phases are explored with the inclusion of wider elements in the potential expanded mobile infrastructure, such as servers and the network.From the available literature, the manufacturing phase is shown to dominate the life cycle of a “typical” smartphone for GHG emissions. Smartphone users are shown to be increasingly reliant upon the internet for provision of their communications. Adding a server into the scope of a smartphone is shown to increase the use phase impact from 8.5 to 18.0 kg CO$_{2}$-eq, other phases are less affected. Addition of the network increases the use phase by another 24.7 kg CO$_{2}$-eq. In addition, it is shown that take-back of mobile phones is not effective at present and that prompt return of the phones could result in reduction in impact by best reuse potential and further reduction in toxic emissions through inappropriate disposal.The way in which consumers interact with their phones is changing, leading to a system which is far more integrated with the internet. A product service system based upon a cloud service highlights the need for improved energy efficiency to make greatest reduction in GHG emissions in the use phase, and gives a mechanism to exploit residual value of the handsets by timely return of the phones, their components and recovery of materials.
Starting Page 1181
Ending Page 1196
Page Count 16
File Format PDF
ISSN 09483349
Journal The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment
Volume Number 20
Issue Number 8
e-ISSN 16147502
Language English
Publisher Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Publisher Date 2015-06-10
Publisher Place Berlin, Heidelberg
Access Restriction One Nation One Subscription (ONOS)
Subject Keyword Greenhouse gas Life cycle assessment Mobile phone Product service system Scope Smartphone User profiles Environment Environmental Economics Environmental Engineering/Biotechnology Environmental Chemistry
Content Type Text
Resource Type Article
Subject Environmental Science
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