Abstract
On May 25 - 26, 2000 in Brighton (England), the
third in a series of international workshops was held under the
umbrella of UNEP addressing issues in Life Cycle Impact Assessment
(LCIA). The workshop provided a forum for experts to discuss
midpoint vs. endpoint modeling. Midpoints are considered to be
links in the cause-effect chain (environmental mechanism) of an impact
category, prior to the endpoints, at which characterization factors or
indicators can be derived to reflect the relative importance
of emissions or extractions. Common examples of midpoint
characterization factors include ozone depletion potentials, global
warming potentials, and photochemical ozone (smog) creation potentials.
Recently, however, some methodologies have adopted characterization
factors at an endpoint level in the cause-effect chain for all
categories of impact (e.g., human health impacts in terms of disability
adjusted life years for carcinogenicity, climate change, ozone
depletion, photochemical ozone creation; or impacts in terms of changes
in biodiversity, etc.). The topics addressed at this workshop
included the implications of midpoint versus endpoint indicators with
respect to uncertainty (parameter, model and scenario), transparency
and the ability to subsequently resolve trade-offs across impact
categories using weighting techniques. The workshop closed with a
consensus that both midpoint and endpoint methodologies provide useful
information to the decision maker, prompting the call for tools
that include both in a consistent framework.
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