Estimating Raw Material Equivalents on a Macro-Level: Comparison of Multi-Regional Input−Output Analysis and Hybrid LCI-IO
The mass of material consumed by a population has become a useful proxy
for measuring environmental pressure. The “raw material equivalents” (RME) metric of
material consumption addresses the issue of including the full supply chain (including
imports) when calculating national or product level material impacts. The RME
calculation suffers from data availability, however, as quantitative data on production
practices along the full supply chain (in different regions) is required. Hence, the RME is
currently being estimated by three main approaches: (1) assuming domestic technology
in foreign economies, (2) utilizing region-specific life-cycle inventories (in a hybrid
framework), and (3) utilizing multi-regional input−output (MRIO) analysis to explicitly
cover all regions of the supply chain. While the first approach has been shown to give
inaccurate results, this paper focuses on the benefits and costs of the latter two
approaches. We analyze results from two key (MRIO and hybrid) projects modeling raw
material equivalents, adjusting the models in a stepwise manner in order to quantify the
effects of individual conceptual elements. We attempt to isolate the MRIO gap, which denotes the quantitative impact of
calculating the RME of imports by an MRIO approach instead of the hybrid model, focusing on the RME of EU external trade
imports. While, the models give quantitatively similar results, differences become more pronounced when tracking more detailed
material flows. We assess the advantages and disadvantages of the two approaches and look forward to ways to further harmonize
data and approaches.
SCHOER Karl;
WOOD R.;
ARTO OLAIZOLA Ignacio;
WEINZETTEL Jan;
2014-01-22
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
JRC88096
0013-936X,
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC88096,
10.1021/es404166f,
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