What Is Life Cycle Assessment?
Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) is a tool that evaluates the environmental impact of a product across its complete lifespan, from raw material extraction through production, distribution, use, and final disposal. It identifies opportunities to reduce environmental impact and improve overall sustainability at every stage of the value chain.
LCA Models by Scope
Different LCA approaches serve different analytical needs:
- Cradle-to-Grave: The most comprehensive model, covering everything from resource extraction through final disposal or recycling.
- Cradle-to-Gate: Measures environmental impact from raw materials to the point where the product leaves the factory.
- Gate-to-Gate: Evaluates specific production phases within a single facility or process.
- Product Category LCA: Assesses environmental impacts across groups of similar products for benchmarking purposes.
The Five Lifecycle Stages
Every product passes through five fundamental stages, each contributing to its total environmental footprint:
- Raw material extraction — sourcing the inputs that form the basis of the product.
- Manufacturing and processing — transforming raw materials into finished goods.
- Transportation — moving materials and products through the supply chain.
- Use and retail — the product’s operational phase in the hands of consumers.
- Waste disposal — end-of-life management including recycling, landfill, or incineration.
Key Benefits for Businesses
Environmental Hotspot Identification
LCA enables companies to pinpoint the production phases with the greatest environmental impact, allowing them to prioritize sustainability initiatives where they will deliver the most meaningful results.
Cost Savings
By revealing inefficiencies in energy consumption, supply chain logistics, and waste generation, LCA creates tangible opportunities for cost reduction alongside environmental improvement.
Regulatory Compliance
As environmental regulations grow increasingly stringent across Europe, LCA provides the data foundation companies need to demonstrate compliance with frameworks like the CSRD, EU Taxonomy, and ISO standards.
Brand Reputation
Demonstrating a genuine commitment to understanding and reducing product-level environmental impact builds customer loyalty, attracts sustainability-conscious investors, and differentiates brands in competitive markets.
Getting Started with LCA
Organizations do not need to assess every product at once. Starting with high-impact products or categories and expanding progressively is a practical approach. Digital platforms can distribute environmental impact data across materials, impact areas, and suppliers, enabling informed product redesign decisions without overwhelming internal teams.