72 results
Search Results
2. End-user engagement: The missing link of sustainability transition for Australian residential buildings.
- Author
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Martek, Igor, Hosseini, M. Reza, Shrestha, Asheem, Edwards, David J., Seaton, Stewart, and Costin, Glenn
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CARBON taxes , *EMISSIONS trading , *SUSTAINABILITY , *MONETARY incentives , *CARBON offsetting , *DWELLINGS , *SUSTAINABLE buildings - Abstract
This paper argues that attempts to transform Australia's urban environment into a sufficiently sustainable one has been misdirected. The 'green rating tool,' industry's adherence to relevant standards and governmental policies represent the primary means of effecting the sustainability transition. However, only high-profile commercial building owners seem interested in being green-rated; the actual end-users of buildings are far less committed (e.g. employees ensconced in commercial buildings and residential home occupiers). Through a systematic review of 103 journal articles published on the topic of end-users and sustainability transition, original findings are presented. The findings reveal that most residential end-users do not purchase green homes and without their 'buy-in,' sustainability transition across Australia will continue to fail. This paper offers a critical analysis of the status-quo, identifying where the effort to generate a sustainable urban environment has been misdirected, what challenges prevail, and why residential end-users have been overlooked. In looking for a way forward that engages end-users, the paper proposes that financial incentives for the purchase of low-carbon buildings must be introduced into the residential real-estate market. And the modeling for this rebate is discussed in terms of emissions trading schemes or carbon tax. • Attempts to transform Australia's urban environment into a sufficiently sustainable one have not generated desirable outcomes. • A systematic review of 103 journal articles is conducted on the topic of end-users and sustainability transition. • Residential end-users do not purchase green homes and without their 'buy[HYPHEN]in,' sustainability transition will fail. • Financial incentives for the purchase of low-carbon buildings must be introduced into the residential real-estate market. • The modeling for the rebate is discussed in terms of emissions trading schemes or carbon tax. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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3. Life-cycle greenhouse-gas emissions assessment: An Australian commercial building perspective.
- Author
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Le, Khoa N., Tran, Cuong N.N., and Tam, Vivian W.Y.
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SUSTAINABLE architecture , *GREENHOUSE gas mitigation , *ENERGY consumption of buildings , *COMMERCIAL buildings , *CONSTRUCTION industry , *SUSTAINABLE buildings - Abstract
To fulfil the hunger for sustainable development, Australian construction sector seems to contemplate toward green design. Green-Star environmental rating system, one of the active building rating systems in Australia, has also been employed in New Zealand, and South Africa. To help engineers and designers obtain comprehensive visualisation on sustainable projects, this paper develops a model to evaluate energy consumption and greenhouse-gas emissions based on typical Australian commercial building alternatives. From that, this paper explains how to achieve points for “Energy” and “Life-cycle impacts” categories of this rating system. The model uses GaBi 8.1 platforms and shows relationships between building's energy consumption, and greenhouse-gas emissions released during the building lifetime. This paper provides insight into life-cycle greenhouse-gas emissions assessment for several typical commercial building fabrics in Australia. The developed model can also be conveniently modified to automate calculations for other credits under the Green-Star environmental rating system, and other environmental rating systems around the world. The study suggests that designers should consider the inverse relationship between building envelopes' total R-value with energy consumption and greenhouse-gas emissions. Another finding shows that materials used for building envelopes play a significant role to manage energy consumption as well as greenhouse-gas emissions amount during the building's life-cycle. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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4. Declaring Talloires: Profile of sustainability communications in Australian signatory universities.
- Author
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Zutshi, Ambika and Creed, Dr Andrew
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SUSTAINABLE development , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *PUBLIC communication , *COMPARATIVE studies , *STRATEGIC planning - Abstract
This paper profiles Australian universities’ website communications about sustainability initiatives, especially relating to Talloires Declaration signification and the ten recommended actions. The research involves a content study of Talloires signatories’ websites and their semiotic and signaling theory aspects across time. The source is publicly available information (time period 2014 and 2015 respectively) in context with education for sustainable development (ESD) in society and the transaction model in communication theory. It is found that some of the signatory universities in Australia exemplify a few of the Talloires ten agreed actions in their public communications, but each point is not emphasised with equal priority. The variance may be due to divergent underlying objectives; such as public communication of Talloires toward genuine benefit for the environment, or to create a strategic positioning tool to signal the university as an environmental champion within the broader society. Focusing upon secondary data from signatory university websites in Australia, the paper provides a study of higher education signification of Talloires. It assists the initial understanding of signaling theory in the public communication transactions that promote Talloires action and implementation. The findings encourage further studies of related communication issues in universities in other countries. The paper also deepens local and global understanding of perceptions of sustainability and contributes to the body of comparative literature of sustainability in higher education as a development component of strategic management of ESD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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5. Methodology for the integrated assessment on the use of recycled concrete aggregate replacing natural aggregate in structural concrete.
- Author
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Wijayasundara, Mayuri, Mendis, Priyan, and Crawford, Robert H.
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WASTE products as building materials , *CONCRETE waste recycling , *FILLER materials , *REINFORCED concrete , *MINERAL aggregates , *ROADS - Abstract
Recycled concrete waste in the form of recycled concrete aggregate (RCA) is presently used mostly as a road base filler in Australia. However, instead of producing natural aggregate (NA) to manufacture natural aggregate concrete (NAC) to use in structural concrete, there is potential to use RCA to manufacture recycled aggregate concrete (RAC). While the material performance of RAC compared to NAC is analysed in the existing literature, it is not evident whether the use of RCA in structural concrete results in financial and environmental benefits. Previous literature analysing these aspects mostly focuses on a single area of investigation. This paper presents an integrated methodology for the assessment of the use of RCA replacing NA in structural concrete, considering technical, financial, environmental and social perspectives. Cost-benefit assessment (CBA) has been used to evaluate the internalised impacts as well as external costs concerning the use of both RAC and NAC. The scope of each discipline-focused assessment is presented demarcating the relevant scope for further study, and the specific tools and methodologies to be adopted are specified. Finally, amalgamating the different discipline-focused assessments, a unique approach for comparing a sustainable, alternative raw material for concrete, is presented in this paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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6. A systematic review of barriers to implementing net zero energy buildings in Australia.
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Brown, Darcy, Tokede, Olubukola, Li, Hong Xian, and Edwards, David
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BIBLIOMETRICS , *GOVERNMENT policy , *CONSTRUCTION industry - Abstract
Building operations use 45% of the total energy in Australia, and Net-Zero Energy Buildings (NZEBs) are instrumental in achieving net zero emissions by 2050. However, research reveals that various factors hinder NZEB adoption in Australia, and it is imperative to contextualise the barriers, thereby highlighting clear gaps that can be addressed to enhance the implementation of NZEB in Australia. This study presents a systematic literature review and bibliometric analysis to examine the barriers that hinder the implementation of NZEB contextualised within the Australian building industry. The paper's novelty resides in its contextualisation of barriers to NZEB thereby highlighting clear gaps that can be addressed to enhance the implementation of NZEB in Australia. Emergent results reveal the most impactful barriers experienced and the inter-relatedness between barriers and their effects on each other. These identified barriers are also compared with comparable countries, including the UK, China, Italy and the US. New insight and knowledge acquired provide a basis for assessing potential solutions to the main barriers. Findings show that a lack of knowledge, climate issues, and cost issues, in addition to government policy factors, are considered primary barriers encountered by the industry, hindering the achievement of NZEBs. It is imperative that future studies and initiatives counteract these impacts to realise a better implementation of NZEB in the Australian context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Enabling factors and critical extensions for the algal-based bioplastics industry.
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Lee, Thomas, Wearne, Sam, Wakefield-Rann, Rachael, and Scardifield, Kate
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BIODEGRADABLE plastics , *GREEN technology , *SUSTAINABLE development , *EMERGING industries , *CIRCULAR economy , *SUSTAINABLE design - Abstract
Emerging industries and technologies are made up of objective, practical requirements and ideas that encompass broad hopes for what future newness might enable. The bioeconomy is one such emerging industry. Its recent evolution has involved a complicated and dynamic mix of promises, reality checks and subsequent ambivalences. This article frames and investigates the emerging algae-based bioplastics industry as one niche within this broader system envisaged for social, technological, economic, political and ecological change. As such, our paper presents two categories of knowledge that in practice interrelate: 1) specific and practical recommendations that can assist a future algal-based bioplastics industry to develop in Australia in ways that are conscious of socio-ecological and socio-cultural dimensions, and 2) critical extensions that go beyond the attributes of newness, impact, suddenness and universality often emphasised in both popular and scientific research into emerging green technologies. In particular, our analysis highlights the importance of specific temporal, tonal and spatial factors when framing the contextual factors associated emerging industries, technologies and the different pathways for change they might help support. • Pathways and enabling factors for a algal-based bioplastics industry in regional Australia are presented. • The 'social idea' of the bioeconomy is analysed with reference to algal-based bioplastics. • The algal-based bioplastics industry is contextualised in relation to transition pathways literatureon the bioeconomy. • Themes and recommendations are synthesised from literature review and semi-structured interviews. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. A resource-based view of opportunities to transform Australia's electricity sector.
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Biggs, Che
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ELECTRIC industries , *RENEWABLE energy sources , *FOSSIL fuels & the environment , *UNCERTAIN systems , *PHOTOVOLTAIC power generation , *SMALL business ,ENVIRONMENTAL aspects - Abstract
Proponents of low-carbon transformation face an uphill battle to reconfigure incumbent energy systems against powerful interests protecting the status quo. Australia's electricity sector is an example of such a system, wedded to fossil fuels and backed by much of the country's political establishment. This paper addresses the potential for low-carbon transformation in Australia's electricity sector. It explores the complex and uncertain dynamics shaping the sector and outlines how these can be understood through the lens of strategic agency – with an eye for opportunities to drive a shift to renewables. It reviews the dynamics of change and re-stability shaping Australia's electricity sector between 2006 and 2015 and applies a resource-based view of transformative agency to analyse these dynamics. Results show the sector suffers multiple stressors and emphasise disruptive changes ‘in the pipeline’. Critically, many of these transformative dynamics stem from factors outside the influence of the electricity sector and its supporters. While results do not point to a clear trajectory or outcome of transformation, they indicate the uptake of small-scale solar photovoltaic (PV) systems by households and small business will play a defining role in the sector's future configuration. Furthermore, the exploration of transformative dynamics affecting the electricity sector through a resource-based lens shows that many opportunities exist for strategic agents to intervene in support of a disruptive shift to renewables. The paper suggests a range of mechanisms that agents could use to undermine the strength of fossil energy in the electricity sector and encourage a shift to renewables. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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9. Managing undesirable outputs in the Australian construction industry using Data Envelopment Analysis models.
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Hu, Xiancun and Liu, Chunlu
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CONSTRUCTION industry , *DATA envelopment analysis , *MATHEMATICAL models , *CARBON sequestration , *ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Carbon reduction has become one of the most significant challenges for economic growth. This paper presents the preliminary analysis of undesirable output reduction targets and emission schedules in temporal–spatial comparisons based on Data Envelopment Analysis. The reduction targets of undesirable outputs are investigated, including the maximum, input, technical and ideal reduction targets. Four Data Envelopment Analysis models that are based on a sequential benchmark technology and variable returns to scale are introduced to measure these reduction percentages. In order to formulate the optimal emission schedule of undesirable outputs, an optimal model is provided without inflation. Data from the Australian construction industry from 2000 to 2010 are employed to develop the models. The results of the analysis indicate that the Australian Government could achieve its promised carbon reduction targets in the construction industry. Most Australian regions' construction industries possess carbon mitigation potential and some of them could increase their desirable outputs if carbon were decreased. This paper suggests that policymakers can benefit from formulating various suitable undesirable output reduction objectives and schedules through the models developed. The research method can be replicated for other sectors and regions focussing on undesirable output reduction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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10. Energy recovery alternatives for the sustainable management of olive oil industry waste in Australia: life cycle assessment.
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El Hanandeh, Ali
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REFUSE as fuel , *OLIVE oil industry , *INDUSTRIAL waste management , *HOME heating & ventilation , *PYROLYSIS - Abstract
Over the last two decades, the olive oil industry in Australia has been growing at an annual rate of 9%. Nevertheless, the highly polluting solid waste and wastewater generated by the industry poses significant challenges for the environmental sustainability of the industry. This paper analysed five alternatives for managing this waste stream using life cycle assessment methodology. The options included manufacturing briquettes as solid fuel for home heating; pellets for domestic or industrial water heating; pyrolysis and composting. The functional unit used in this study is the processing of 1 Mg of olive solid waste at the mill. Emissions were categorised into eight impact categories: ozone layer depletion potential (ODP), global warming potential (GWP100), eutrophication potential (EP), acidification potential (AP), human toxicity (HTP), fossil fuel depletion potential (FDP), ionising radiation potential (IRP), and photochemical oxidant formation potential (POFP). The study showed that although composting (current best practices – CBP) can achieve significant environmental benefits, using the olive waste to produce energy products may achieve better results, especially when displacing electricity from the main grid. The production of pellets for use in domestic hot water boilers (PHWH) is the option that is likely to deliver the highest environmental benefits. For example, GWP100 and ODP of the PHWH were estimated to be −1057 kg CO 2 -Eq, −1.5 × 10 −5 kg CFC-11-Eq compared to −12.4 kg-CO 2 -Eq and 5.3 × 10 −8 kg CFC-11-Eq achieved by the CBP, respectively. Future energy scenario and transportation distances were identified as significant parameters affecting the performance of the options. Sensitivity analysis showed that the expected change in the future Australian energy mix to cleaner energy sources is unlikely to have a significant effect on the performance of the alternatives. The results also showed little sensitivity to transportation distances of the energy product to the end user. This paper is the first to evaluate options for energy utilisation of olive solid waste using life cycle assessment and compare it to industry current best practices (composting). Although the paper focuses on the Australian olive oil industry, the results are also relevant to other countries and regions were olive solid waste is generated in relatively moderate quantities but distributed over large geographic area. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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11. Social dimensions of energy supply alternatives in steelmaking: comparison of biomass and coal production scenarios in Australia.
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Weldegiorgis, Fitsum S. and Franks, Daniel M.
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POWER resources , *STEEL industry , *BIOMASS production , *COAL industry , *CLIMATE change , *TECHNOLOGY assessment , *SOCIAL impact assessment - Abstract
Global climatic change is driving research and development in low emissions technologies. One such technology is the use of charcoal from biomass in steelmaking. This paper adapts social life cycle assessment methodologies to analyse the social dimensions of energy supply alternatives in steelmaking using regionalised production scenarios in Australia. Three energy supply alternatives are investigated: charcoal produced from Radiata pine plantation forestry; charcoal produced from Mallee eucalypt revegetation on agricultural land; and metallurgical coal. Impact indicators analysed include land-use, employment, workplace health & safety and a qualitative analysis of identified stakeholder issues. The research finds that biomass alternatives are significant generators of direct employment at the regional level; have concomitantly higher rates of workplace injuries and represent a significant change in land-use. Charcoal produced from Mallee biomass planted as a conservation measure on farmland, however, has the benefit of representing a shared land-use that provides an additional farm revenue stream and assists dryland salinity management. The paper finds that full substitution of coal by pine or Mallee charcoal does not provide a unique solution for optimising the social performance of the energy supply alternatives across all indicators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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12. Substance flow analysis of steel and long term sustainability of iron ore resources in Australia, Brazil, China and India.
- Author
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Yellishetty, Mohan and Mudd, Gavin M.
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RESOURCE exploitation , *SUSTAINABILITY , *FLUID flow , *IRON ores , *METAL recycling - Abstract
Substance flow analysis (SFA) provides a helpful tool for the study of the industrial metabolism of a certain substance within a regional level. This paper presents SFA of steel in four countries, namely Australia, Brazil, China and India. These countries are traditionally economically mineral dependent and are major contributors in global iron ore production. For example, in 2010 together these countries produced 81% of world iron ore. Based on the analysis it was found that Australian and Brazilian iron ore stocks will deplete rapidly while China and India are accumulating. This paper then presents a discussion on sustainability issues related to substance flows of steel stocks. The study is aimed at providing better understanding of stocks and flows and to inform the policy making for achieving the industrial metabolism and consequently leading to better management of resources and recycling of steel in the countries under study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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13. Climate change accounting and the Australian mining industry: exploring the links between corporate disclosure and the generation of legitimacy
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Pellegrino, Catherine and Lodhia, Sumit
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MINERAL industries & the environment , *CLIMATE change , *LICENSES , *ENVIRONMENTAL reporting , *STAKEHOLDERS , *DISCLOSURE - Abstract
Abstract: This paper explores how disclosure is used by key bodies in the Australian mining industry as a means to respond to climate change and ensure their social licence to operate. The study utilises a legitimacy theory framework and a multi-case analysis to examine the environmental disclosure practices via a variety of media of two companies and two industry bodies within Australia''s mining industry. It is revealed that a combination of legitimising strategies is undertaken by key bodies in the Australian mining industry, however to differing degrees depending on the organisation. There is also support for the notion that different media plays a critical role in facilitating the legitimacy seeking behaviours of the companies and industry bodies. This study extends existing literature on legitimacy theory by highlighting the value of utilising this perspective to explore contemporary phenomena such as corporate responses to climate change. The findings of this study have practical significance as they are expected to have important policy ramifications. One of the differentiating features of this paper, compared to prior studies utilising a legitimacy theory framework, is the examination of legitimising disclosure strategies at an industry level, which complements a company level analysis. Moreover, variations in legitimising disclosure strategies and communication media employed may be due to their focus on differing conferring publics and stakeholder groups. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
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14. An insight into waste management in Australia with a focus on landfill technology and liner leak detection.
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Pandey, Lopa Mudra S. and Shukla, Sanjay Kumar
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WASTE management , *LEAK detection , *LANDFILLS , *FACILITY management , *GROUNDWATER monitoring , *ENVIRONMENTAL protection , *TECHNOLOGY - Abstract
It is critical for landfilling facilities to follow proper waste handling and management practices. These include the use of suitable lining systems for waste containment, and the implementation of efficient leakage monitoring and detection systems. In this paper, an attempt has been made to present the current state of landfilling in Australia with a focus on the lining practices and leak detection methods. An extensive study was conducted involving different private and public waste handling and management facilities in all the states and territories of Australia. Based on the survey and the information available in the public domain, it was observed that different landfill sites practiced non-uniform set of directives for waste classification, siting, design, operation and rehabilitation. Majority of the facilities were found to be publicly owned. The use of groundwater monitoring wells for leakage detection was more prevalent than other leak detection methods. Further, a new method of leak detection by the simulation of landfill lining system, which is being developed and investigated in our research, is also presented. This study is particularly useful in generating awareness about the state of landfilling and will help various environmental protection agencies in making informed decisions for the development of rules and regulations to govern landfills. The new leak detection method as developed in our research can find applications in the development of monitoring systems for landfill liners, subbase contamination detection, and development of sensors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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15. Global solar radiation prediction by ANN integrated with European Centre for medium range weather forecast fields in solar rich cities of Queensland Australia.
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Ghimire, Sujan, Deo, Ravinesh C., Downs, Nathan J., and Raj, Nawin
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SOLAR radiation , *POWER resources , *WEATHER forecasting , *ARTIFICIAL neural networks , *METEOROLOGICAL stations - Abstract
Abstract To support alternative forms of energy resources, the prediction of global incident solar radiation (I rad) is critical to establish the efficacy of solar energy resources as a free and clean energy, and to identify and screen solar powered sites. Solar radiation data for construction of energy feasibility studies are not available in many locations due to the absence of meteorological stations, especially in remote or regional sites. To surmount the challenge in solar energy site identification, the universally gridded data integrated into predictive models used to generate reliable I rad forecasts can be considered as a viable medium for future energy utilization. The objective of this paper is to review, develop and evaluate a suite of machine learning (ML) models based on the artificial neural network (ANN) versus several other kinds of data-driven models such as support vector regression (SVR), Gaussian process machine learning (GPML) and genetic programming (GP) models for the prediction of daily I rad generated through the European Centre for Medium Range Weather Forecasting (ECMWF) Reanalysis fields. The performance of the ML models are benchmarked against several statistical tools: auto regressive moving integrated average (ARIMA), Temperature Model (TM), Time series and Fourier Series (TSFS) models. To train these models, 87 different predictor variables from the ERA-Interim reanalysis dataset (01-January-1979 to 31-December-2015) were extracted for 5 solar-rich metropolitan sites (i.e., Brisbane, Gold Coast, Sunshine Coast, Ipswich and Toowoomba, Australia) targeted against surface level I rad available from the measured Scientific Information for Land Owners dataset. For daily forecast models, a total of the 20 most important predictors related to the I rad dataset were screened with nearest component analysis: " fsrnca " feature selection, and partitioned into training (70%), validation (15%) and testing (15%) sets for model design. To benchmark the ANN, TSFS and TM models were developed with Fourier series and regression analysis, respectively and the statistical performance was benchmarked with root mean square error (RMSE), mean absolute error (MAE), Nash-Sutcliffe efficiency (E NS), Willmott's Index (WI), Mean Bias error (MBE), Legates and McCabe Index (E 1), and relative MAE , RMSE and diagnostic plots. The performance of ANN was significantly better than the other models (SVR, GPML, GP, TM), resulting in lower RMSE (1.715–2.27 MJm−2/day relative to 2.14–5.90 MJm−2/day), relative RMSE (9.07–12.47 vs 10.98–29.15), relative RMAE (7.97–11.74 vs 9.27–33.96) and larger WI, E NS and E 1 (0.938–0.967 vs. 0.462–0.955, 0.935–0.872 vs. 0.355–0.915, 0.672–0.783 vs. 0.252–0.740). Additionally, models assessed with predictors grouped into El Niño, La Niña and the positive, negative and neutral periods of Indian Ocean Dipole, affirmed the merits of ANN model (RRMSE ≤ 11%). Seasonal analysis showed that ANN was an elite tool over SVR, GPML and GP for I rad prediction. The study concludes that an ANN approach integrated with ECMWF fields, incorporating physical interactions of I rad with atmospheric data, is an efficacious alternative to forecast solar energy and assist with energy modelling for solar-rich sites that have diverse climatic conditions to further support clean energy utilization. Graphical abstract Image 1 Highlights • ANN, SVR, GPML and GP models were designed for prediction of daily solar radiation with reanalysis data. • Determinstic model ARIMA, temperature model and time series with Fourier transform model was used for benchmarking. • Nearest component analysis (fsrnca) was used for feature selection to get optimum inputs. • ANN outperform all ML model and deterministic models. • Solar energy potential is assessed for 5 cities of Queensland, Australia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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16. The natural advantage of regions: linking sustainability, innovation, and regional development in Australia
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Potts, Tavis
- Subjects
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SUSTAINABLE development , *TECHNOLOGICAL innovations , *COMMUNITY development , *ECOLOGICAL modernization , *GOVERNMENT policy , *SOCIAL institutions , *INVESTMENTS - Abstract
Abstract: The combined impacts of the financial crisis and climate change are driving the evolution of sustainable business and changing the way that governments plan for development. Markets are emerging for a range of environmentally orientated products and services as societies move (or lurch) towards reducing impacts and adapt to changing conditions. National governments are actively formulating policy and providing investment to develop green economies as one of the responses to the global financial crisis. Many of the political and economic drivers have been focused at the international and national scale, and while critical for setting the national framework for development, it often neglects the key role that regions and localities can play in ecological modernization. This paper explores two regional case studies in New South Wales (NSW), Australia, that are initiating shifts towards networks of sustainable businesses and communities and offers recommendations for further policy development. The focus of this paper is on the evolving regional sustainability market and its relationship to other social institutions including governments, communities and the individual. The unifying concept is the idea of the ‘natural advantage’, a model that integrates innovation and sustainability as a part of the regional development policy agenda. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2010
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17. Surveying the state of higher education in energy efficiency, in Australian engineering curriculum
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Desha, Cheryl J. and Hargroves, Karlson (Charlie)
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ENGINEERING education , *ENERGY consumption , *COLLEGE curriculum , *ENERGY management , *EDUCATORS , *SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
Abstract: This paper presents the method and results of a survey of 27 of the 33 Australian universities teaching engineering education in late 2007, undertaken by The Natural Edge Project (hosted by Griffith University and the Australian National University) and supported by the National Framework for Energy Efficiency. This survey aimed to ascertain the extent of energy efficiency (EE) education, and to identify preferred methods to assist in increasing the extent to which EE education is embedded in engineering curriculum. In this paper the context for the survey is supported by a summary of the key results from a variety of surveys undertaken over the last decade internationally. The paper concludes that EE education across universities and engineering disciplines in Australia is currently highly variable and ad hoc. Based on the results of the survey; this paper highlights a number of preferred options to support educators to embed sustainability within engineering programs, and future opportunities for monitoring EE, within the context of engineering education for sustainable development (EESD). [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2010
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18. Reply to Schandl et al., 2016, JCLEPRO and Hatfield-Dodds et al., 2015, Nature: How challenging is decoupling for Australia?: Reply to: Schandl H., Hatfield-Dodds S., Wiedmann T., Geschke A., Cai Y., West J., Newth D., Baynes T., Lenzen M. and Owen A. (2016). Decoupling global environmental pressure and economic growth: scenarios for energy use, materials use and carbon emissions. Journal of Cleaner Production 132: 45–56; Hatfield-Dodds S., H. Schandl, P.D. Adams, T.M. Baynes, T.S. Brinsmead, B.A. Bryan, F.H. Chiew, P.W. Graham, M. Grundy, and T. Harwood. (2015). Australia is ‘free to choose’ economic growth and falling environmental pressures. Nature 527(7576): 49–53
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Lenzen, Manfred, Malik, Arunima, and Foran, Barney
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ATMOSPHERIC pressure , *ECONOMIC development , *CARBON dioxide mitigation , *ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis , *GREENHOUSE gas mitigation - Abstract
In this letter, we respond to the articles “Decoupling global environmental pressure and economic growth: scenarios for energy use, materials use and carbon emissions” by Heinz Schandl et al. (Journal of Cleaner Production, 132, 45–56) and “Australia is ‘free to choose’ economic growth and falling environmental pressures” by Hatfield-Dodds et al. (Nature, 527, 49–53). The authors of these papers suggest that policy settings are crucial for Australia to allow growing standard of living to coincide with lower environmental pressure and impact. Both papers make it clear that decoupling has not occurred in past, but stress that this does not mean it cannot occur in the future. Here, we undertake a comprehensive trend analysis by putting their decoupling scenarios into a historical context to assess the feasibility of decoupling economic growth from environmental impacts. To this end, we undertake a structural decomposition analysis to examine the drivers of a change in Australia's greenhouse gas emissions from 1976 to 2050. Using the well-known I = PAT equation, we appraise the contribution of population growth, affluence and technology in accelerating or decelerating the growth of emissions over the 75 year period. Our results suggest that population growth and affluence are key accelerators of greenhouse gas emissions. We argue that in order to decrease emissions from fuel consumption, unprecedented improvements in emissions intensity will be required both in Australia and globally. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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19. Qualitative and quantitative tool development to support environmentally responsible decisions
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Verghese, Karli and Hes, Dominique
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PRODUCT management , *DECISION making , *MATHEMATICAL instruments - Abstract
Abstract: The Centre for Design at RMIT University in Melbourne, Australia has developed various quantitative and qualitative tools to support decision-making by industry and government partners in product design and policy development. The aim, in general, is to support development of attractive, functional, marketable products while enhancing their environmental performance. Depending on the product, the project scope and the client, the tools that are used can be anything from a half-day char-rette, environmental checklist, to a one-year life cycle assessment (LCA). In this paper we describe our approach and the various tools that have been developed by the research team at the Centre over recent years with the use of case studies. The paper argues that it is important for tool development to be based on solid research and information, but the key to influencing product design decisions is the translation of this information into a usable format for the users. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
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20. Environmental improvements in the metal finishing industry in Australasia
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Reeve, Darrell J.
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EDUCATION , *FINISHES & finishing , *METAL finishing - Abstract
Abstract: Metal finishing, as an industry, has had a vexed history with the environment and regulatory authorities over many decades throughout the world. Over the past 20years, this situation has been vastly improved in some developed countries. This paper will examine the industry''s recent progress in Australasia and highlight specific issues including new technologies adopted, research projects undertaken, responses to Government legislation and education. Many toxic chemicals have been replaced, recycled in closed loop scenarios and prevented from entering the environment via the atmosphere, water ways or landfilling. This paper is written as a qualitative industry summary rather than an academic study. It is meant to highlight the major changes that have occurred and the reasons why, rather than present documented and detailed evidence. The author has drawn on his 35years experience in the industry as well as many experienced colleagues from around the world. Although the geographic scope is Australasia, many comments emanate from the state of Victoria because it is still the manufacturing base, especially in relation to the auto industry that has affected the changes to a large degree. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2007
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21. Environmental impacts of potential mining-replacing-import alternative for China in response to the China-Australia coal ban.
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Fan, Zhaoyang, Ju, Xin, Tong, Hui, Liang, Zilu, Sun, Naixiu, Mao, Hongjun, and Peng, Jianfei
- Subjects
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FUGITIVE emissions , *COAL , *COAL mining , *COAL sales & prices , *CLIMATE change & health , *ENVIRONMENTAL degradation - Abstract
Australia is a long-term key partner of China in coal trading, which is famous for high-quality coal and its price advantage. However, affected by the evolution of international political and economic situation, China has issued a coal ban on Australian coal since the end of 2020. The potential environmental consequences of this coal ban remain unclear. So, this paper quantifies the ban's impact on air pollution, human health and climate change by simulating the emission difference between the port scenario (simulating the emissions due to Australian coal import under business as usual) and the mine scenario (simulating the emissions due to domestic coal mining that converted from import share of Australian coal), and monetizes the losses into economic costs for direct comparison. The results illustrate the emission of SO 2 , VOCs and GHG in mine scenario grows up to 102, 12 and 6 times the amount of that in port scenario, mainly deriving from coal mining process in the North China Plain and Yunnan-Guizhou Plateau. It shows that the potential alternative of replacing import with mining leads to PM 2.5 pollution exacerbation and O 3 pollution abatement, which causes 148 (95 % CI: 101–183) non-communicable diseases and respiratory disease-related deaths in total. As for GHG, the emission of BC in transportation process and fugitive methane in coal mining process contribute to an impressive effect on warming potential with few quantities, which is worth noting in control process. In total, the environmental deterioration resulted in an economic loss of approximately 934 million yuan. The undiminished demand for high-quality industrial coal as well as growing carbon tax could make the economic value of the coal ban's environmental consequences more considerable in the near future. This research emphasizes the contradiction between economic development and environmental improvement caused by excessive dependence on coal and addresses a critical knowledge gap in assessing the ban's environmental impact by economic value. The result directly demonstrates the environmental consequences of the potential mining-replacing-import alternative and helps better understand environmental influences on the Chinese government's decision. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
22. Resource flow and product chain analysis as practical tools to promote cleaner production initiatives
- Author
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Narayanaswamy, V., Scott, J.A., Ness, J.N., and Lochhead, M.
- Subjects
- *
STARCH , *WHEAT - Abstract
This paper demonstrates application of resource (material and energy) flow analysis combined with a product chain framework for profiling environmental burdens. The production of Australian wheat starch is used as an example. The primary objectives of the study were to determine benchmark information for assessing and improving environmental and economic operational performance, with particular reference to energy consumption and wastewater reduction. Data were collated on material and energy inputs, and emissions inventory data for the stages of wheat crop cultivation, grain storage and transportation, wheat flour milling, wheat starch production, product transportation, starch use and ultimate disposal were documented in this paper. A straightforward approach was then used to analyse environmental impacts in order to determine the key contributing stages in the demand and supply chain. The study helped focus cleaner production efforts to reduce overall environmental impacts in the product chain and improve economic returns. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Measuring the effect of product and environmental messaging attributes on alternative wine packaging choices.
- Author
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Mesidis, Jakob, Lockshin, Larry, Corsi, Armando Maria, Page, Bill, and Cohen, Justin
- Subjects
- *
WINE packaging , *GLASS bottles , *WINE industry , *ALUMINUM cans , *CARBON emissions , *ECOLOGICAL impact - Abstract
Traditional glass bottles are the wine industry's major source of carbon emissions. Those wishing to reduce the carbon footprint embedded in wine have been looking to alternative packaging, such as PET, aluminium cans, and bag-in-box (BIB) to mitigate the impact. However, these alternative formats pose challenges with consumer acceptance and knowledge of the eco-benefits of each format. This paper uses a discrete choice experiment and latent class analysis to investigate the possible effects of message content and style (abstract vs concrete) on wine purchase in the context of brand size, brand prestige, and pricing. The analysis reveals the presence of two customer segments, which highly emphasise the pack format. Of the four non-glass packs tested, BIB and flat glass lookalike PET bottles score the highest preference after glass bottles. Message content and appeal type score low in their ability to alter preferences, whilst mid-to-low prices increase the chances of alternative packaging to be chosen. • Packaging format is a key choice driver for wine. • Glass is still the most preferred packaging format. • Bag in Box and low-carbon alternatives that look most like glass have the most potential for uptake. • Message content and appeal have little impact on choice. • Alternative packaging is more likely to be chosen for mid-to-low-priced wines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Green office buildings and sustainability: Does green human resource management elicit green behaviors?
- Author
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Parida, Subhadarsini, Ananthram, Subramaniam, Chan, Christopher, and Brown, Kerry
- Subjects
- *
PERSONNEL management , *SUSTAINABLE buildings , *OFFICE buildings , *SUSTAINABILITY , *ORGANIZATIONAL identification , *ORGANIZATIONAL behavior , *BUILT environment - Abstract
Green buildings are synonymous with environmental sustainability; however, it is unclear what role its occupants, specifically employees, play in promoting sustainability in green office buildings. This paper proposes that Green Human Resource Management (HRM), underpinned by Social Identity Theory (SIT), can maximize the potential of green behaviors to improve employees' outcomes (e.g., job satisfaction and work-related flow) in green office buildings by creating positive workplace behaviors (i.e., green behaviors). We collected multisource data from 549 employees and 91 managers working in 17 organizations in green office buildings across Australia. We confirm the double mediation effects of Green HRM, green behaviors and organizational identification on the relationships between organizational readiness, job satisfaction and work-related flow. The paper makes theoretical contributions by advancing the concept of Green HRM and green behaviors within the realm of SIT, thus taking a multidisciplinary stance in the built environment and sustainability literatures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The Game of Guwarra: A game theory-based decision-making framework for site selection of offshore wind farms in Australia.
- Author
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Golestani, Nima, Arzaghi, Ehsan, Abbassi, Rouzbeh, Garaniya, Vikram, Abdussamie, Nagi, and Yang, Ming
- Subjects
- *
OFFSHORE wind power plants , *RENEWABLE energy sources , *DECISION making , *GAME theory , *WIND power plants , *WIND power - Abstract
Global concerns around climate change and the volatility of conventional fuel prices have prompted researchers and technologists to make significant efforts to identify and exploit alternative energy sources that are cleaner and more sustainable. Wind energy has seen considerable development among these alternative energy sources, mainly due to its abundance and global availability for extraction and the existing knowledge within the aviation and aerospace fields. Many nations, including European countries, already operate offshore wind farms (OWFs) and are progressively carrying out new projects and expanding on other projects. The Australian offshore environment provides unique opportunities for wind energy extraction, particularly along the southern coast of mainland Australia and the regions around Tasmania, where substantially strong winds blow most of the year. A significant challenge to establishing wind farms is the selection of site locations with optimal outputs. This can become a complex decision-making problem if there are numerous options and no information from previous projects. This paper aims to develop a decision-making framework to select the optimal location for installing OWFs while addressing financial, performance-related, and availability-related objectives. This paper adopts a game-theoretical approach to develop a decision-support tool to account for the interdependencies of influencing factors and possible conflicts amongst the parties. The game model is applied to an OWF development case study in the Bass Strait, known for its dominant and strong winds. • A framework to find the optimal location for installing Offshore Wind Farms (OWFs). • Game theory decision-making methodology for offshore renewable energy applications. • Define the influencing factors and conflicts amongst the interested parties. • Apply to OWFs development in Bass Strait, known for its dominant and strong winds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Waste management and possible directions of utilising digital technologies in the construction context.
- Author
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Sepasgozar, Samad M.E., Frances Mair, Deirdre, Tahmasebinia, Faham, Shirowzhan, Sara, Li, Heng, Richter, Amy, Yang, Liming, and Xu, Shixiong
- Subjects
- *
WASTE management , *CONSTRUCTION & demolition debris , *GEOGRAPHIC information systems , *DIGITAL technology , *CONCRETE waste , *BRICKS , *WATER reuse - Abstract
The rapid urbanisation and infrastructure development projects have increased infinite property regeneration and construction projects in the developed countries. This study aims to examine the current construction waste management literature, including key authors, university networks, and relevant information systems, considering four selected countries, including Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States. This paper uses a set of novel metrics, query-based search, and social network analysis techniques for evaluating a dataset of 2337 papers published in a decade by authors from different countries investigating the topic of recycling and reuse of construction and demolition waste in order to identify prominent researchers, influential universities, collaboration practices, and research trends. The dataset of publications is collected from Scopus and analysed using a set of network analysis techniques and statistical analysis. An additional dataset of keywords was collected from the Twitter pages of engineering firms and other relevant industry organisations to assess any possible connection between industry interests and research trends. In order to present a solid analysis of the current investigations in the field, a scientometric analysis along with a rigor statistical method was adopted to carefully identify trends, detailed sub-topics, and the materials investigated in the literature. A probit regression model for testing differences between countries in recycling practices was utilised in the STATA environment. The findings show a set of network analysis and clusters that can help scholars to set their future studies based on the current advances and limitations identified in the literature. Within the dataset, 42% of publications referred to concrete waste, whilst only 2.2% included glass, 2.5% included brick, 4.3% included steel and none included wood, which shows the most common building materials have not been fully covered in the literature. Only 48 publications, or 7.4% of the dataset, originated from the three selected concrete-focused journals. It was also found that information systems appeared in the database lately; however, there is less discussion in the literature on how the integration of Geographic Information System (GIS), Buidling Information Model (BIM), 3D Printing and geo-spatial data analysis can help waste management in the field of construction. The bibliographic analysis of the selected cases shows that universities in Canada and the US exhibit more evidence of domestic collaboration and industry partnerships than universities in Australia and the UK. Additionally, there is evidence to suggest that publications with at least one industry co-author are more likely to address the issue of regulation. The outcome of this paper enables academics, engineers, and regulators to predict research trends, improve industry collaborations and utilise information systems and assign more research resources to address the identified gaps in the literature. • Developed a network of 1408 authors within the dataset and apply Total Publications metrics. • Examined the collaboration of 529 institutions within Australia, Canada, the UK, and the US. • Utilised a probit regression model for testing differences between countries in recycling practices. • Visualised an online GIS-based dashboard of landfills and recycling facilities using geo-spatial data. • Identified gaps in two different directions of material technology and management systems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Energy and GHG reductions considering embodied impacts of retrofitting existing dwelling stock in Greater Melbourne.
- Author
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Seo, Seongwon, Foliente, Greg, and Ren, Zhengen
- Subjects
- *
GREENHOUSE gases & the environment , *GREENHOUSE gas mitigation , *ENERGY consumption of buildings , *RETROFITTING of buildings , *DWELLINGS - Abstract
Energy retrofits of buildings usually ignore the amount of embodied energy and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions needed to reduce the operating energy and related emissions. Focusing on the Greater Melbourne Area (GMA), the fastest growing capital city in Australia, this paper analyses the embodied impacts of different dwelling stock retrofit programs using a combination of a top-down and a bottom-up approach. We look at dwelling stocks that have been built before 2005 (i.e., before a minimum 5-star rating in energy performance was introduced in Australia) because these are expected to consume, without any retrofit or upgrade, about 34.9 TWh of energy or emit 8.57 × 10 6 t-CO 2 eq GHG for heating and cooling every year. Retrofit options to improve their energy star rating range from relatively cheap and easy options (e.g., draught sealing) to relatively expensive options (e.g. double glazing of windows). If all these buildings' energy efficiency is improved to the level of a 6-energy rated dwelling across the metropolitan region, we can save about 25.5 TWh per year in heating and cooling energy (or 6.25 × 10 6 t -CO 2 eq GHG each year). However, the retrofit program is estimated to consume 4.75 TWh of embodied energy, or have 1.89 × 10 6 t -CO 2 eq embodied GHG emissions. This is equivalent to 50% of the annual heating and cooling energy for the stock, or 81% of operational GHG emissions due to heating and cooling of existing dwellings. Considering the total life cycle energy and GHG emissions over the life of the buildings, although reducing the operational heating and cooling energy will remain to be the primary driver for action, the proportion of the embodied impacts’ contribution is expected to increase in the coming years especially as the implementation of net-zero energy/emissions concepts become more commonplace. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Hybrid life cycle assessment of greenhouse gas emissions from cement, concrete and geopolymer concrete in Australia.
- Author
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Teh, Soo Huey, Wiedmann, Thomas, Castel, Arnaud, and de Burgh, James
- Subjects
- *
GREENHOUSE gases & the environment , *CONSTRUCTION industry , *ECOLOGICAL impact , *PORTLAND cement - Abstract
Concrete is the second most used material after water and the production of cement is responsible for 5–8% of global carbon dioxide emissions. The development of low-carbon concretes is pursued worldwide to help the construction industry make its contribution to decarbonising the built environment and achieving carbon reduction targets agreed under the Paris Climate Agreement. However, there is uncertainty around the actual amount of greenhouse gas emissions that can be avoided by employing alternative types of concrete. This study quantifies the carbon footprint intensities of Australian cement and concrete production, including ordinary Portland cement, standard ordinary Portland cement concrete, blended cement-based concrete and geopolymer concrete production. For the first time, an input-output based hybrid life-cycle assessment method is used for these products. The main goal of this paper is therefore to make a methodological comparison between process-based and hybrid life cycle assessment using the Australian cement and concrete production as a case study. A comparison with published results from process-based life-cycle inventories as well as a decomposition of results into product categories is provided. The hybrid life cycle assessment resulted in higher greenhouse gas emissions for ordinary Portland cement and all types of concrete due to the methodology incorporating an economy-wide system boundary, which includes the emissions from upstream processes. For geopolymer concrete in particular, the results were also dependent on the method applied for allocating greenhouse gas emissions from fly ash and slag. The findings from this study are likely to inform the development of strategies and policies aimed at greenhouse gas reduction in the cement and concrete industries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Green infrastructure needs green governance: Lessons from Australia's largest integrated stormwater management project, the River Torrens Linear Park.
- Author
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Ibrahim, Alhassan, Bartsch, Katharine, and Sharifi, Ehsan
- Subjects
- *
GREEN infrastructure , *URBAN runoff management , *PROJECT management , *WATERSHEDS , *SUSTAINABLE development , *WATER quality , *RIVERS - Abstract
The River Torrens Catchment in Adelaide has suffered from poor water quality and flooding for decades. To address these challenges, a green infrastructure project, specifically a Linear Park, was created within the catchment. Although the project has functioned reasonably well since its implementation, its complex nature poses several management challenges. Despite the scale of this project, there is little scholarly literature available. Hence, to analyse these management challenges, this paper reviews the original project documentation, as well as regulations and policy documents together with findings from interviews with key project informants. The aim is to investigate the key drivers for implementation; the major stakeholders involved; and the challenges emerging from the multidimensional attributes of the project. The challenges relate to the inconsistent and informal management structure, the involvement of multiple stakeholders, and pressure from surrounding development. The challenges are further grouped under four main themes, including communication and collaboration, project design goals, institutional and political frameworks, and planning and development regulations. This paper argues that green governance is the key to the successful implementation and management of sustainable green infrastructure projects. The findings from this case study can inform policymakers, planners and researchers to propose appropriate scenarios to manage urban stormwater and to reclaim neglected waterways. • Linear parks have emerged as an increasingly valuable green space typology. • The morphology of a linear park can present complex issues relating to governance. • The River Torrens Linear Park exhibits such complexities. • Green governance is essential for sustainable development of linear parks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Automation in rammed earth construction for industry 4.0: Precedent work, current progress and future prospect.
- Author
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Gomaa, Mohamed, Schade, Sascha, Bao, Ding Wen, and Xie, Yi Min
- Subjects
- *
INDUSTRY 4.0 , *ADVANCED planning & scheduling , *CONSTRUCTION industry , *AUTOMATION , *MACHINE design - Abstract
The increasing awareness of the undesirable environmental impact of cement-based products has led to rethinking earth construction within the digitally mechanised framework of Industry 4.0. The attempts to mechanise earth construction started nearly a decade ago, yet, the past four years have seen a surge in the intensity of research on the advanced manufacturing of earth construction. Additive manufacturing of clay-rich soil, like in cob and adobe methods, has been attracting the primary attention, while on the contrary, considerably limited research has been conducted to mechanise other methods such as rammed earth. This paper collected, reviewed, and analysed the state-of-the-art research on the advanced manufacturing of rammed earth construction, with a focus on process design aspects and machine development. Two case studies of recent digitally manufactured rammed earth projects in Australia and Switzerland were comprehensively analysed to provide a realistic feasibility assessment of the potential and technical challenges. The insights from this research provide a holistic and tangible roadmap to the digital manufacturing of rammed earth construction, which aids in making it more desirable and capable of meeting contemporary demands of the architecture and construction of Industry 4.0. • State-of-the-art advanced manufacturing methods for rammed earth construction are critically reviewed. • Two case studies of digitally manufactured rammed earth projects in Australia and Switzerland are comprehensively analysed. • Potential and challenges of advanced manufacturing for rammed earth construction are discussed. • Information for enhanced utilisation of digital techniques in rammed earth construction is provided. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Least-cost pathways to net-zero, coupled energy systems: A case study in Australia.
- Author
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Zhang, Yimin, Davis, Dominic, and Brear, Michael J.
- Subjects
- *
CARBON sequestration , *RENEWABLE energy transition (Government policy) , *ALTERNATIVE fuels , *HYDROGEN storage , *RENEWABLE energy sources , *ELECTRIC power production , *FOSSIL fuels - Abstract
This paper investigates the least-cost greenhouse gas (GHG) abatement pathway for a coupled energy system. We consider the roles of diverse abatement technologies, such as renewable electricity generation, biomass and carbon capture and storage (CCS), as well as sources of operational flexibility, such as peaking generators, electricity storage, transmission and electrolysis. Scenario and sensitivity analyses are applied to explore plausible pathways to energy system decarbonization. All modelled pathways to a zero-emissions energy system feature an accelerating transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy with diverse technologies playing a role. This includes variable renewable generators (VRG), CCS, and sources of operational flexibility on different timescales. Specifically, synchronous condensers appear to be a cost-effective option to control system frequency, inter-seasonal hydrogen storage in engineered caverns can play a significant and complementary role to that of pumped hydro and battery storage, and technologies that capture and sequester atmospheric carbon, including biomass-to-CCS and direct air capture (DAC), can also play a significant role in the transition to net-zero emissions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Improving how sustainability reports drive change: a critical discourse analysis.
- Author
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Higgins, Colin and Coffey, Brian
- Subjects
- *
SUSTAINABLE development reporting , *CRITICAL discourse analysis , *STRATEGIC planning , *STAKEHOLDERS - Abstract
In this paper we use a form of discourse analysis to explore the ‘activity’ that three quite different sustainability reports set up as companies communicate their social and environmental performance. Our aim is to show what sustainability reports ‘do’ – in order to offer insights about what they ‘could do’. We show that the companies are using sustainability reporting strategically, and that sustainability is embedded in to the company's strategic priorities. Where they mostly narrate and argue a point of view, sustainability reporting can offer additional benefits by transiting towards dialogue. Dialogue provides stakeholders with the means to engage substantially with companies, and also introduce new discourses that may open up new directions in how companies contribute to sustainability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Potential for mine water sharing to reduce unregulated discharge.
- Author
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Gao, Lei, Hou, Caihong, Chen, Yun, Barrett, Damian, Mallants, Dirk, Li, Wanggen, and Liu, Rui
- Subjects
- *
MINE water , *DROUGHTS , *WATER damage , *WATER storage - Abstract
Australia's mining sector periodically suffered huge losses both directly and indirectly from mismanagement of mine water during extreme climatic events. Mine water managers still lack cost-effective tools and strategies to manage both climate-influenced drought and flooding challenges. This paper aims to answer a fundamental question in mine water management: how much can a water sharing approach do to reduce unpermitted (unregulated) mine-affected water to overflow to the environment on a regional scale? To this end, we built a climate-driven hierarchical systems model (C-HSM) of sixteen coal mines in the Bowen Basin of Queensland, Australia. The C-HSM simulated the dynamics of the mine water systems, which was then the basis to assess the potential of mine water sharing to reduce unregulated discharge. We found that mine water sharing could greatly cut down regional unregulated discharge during the 2010–2011 wet season (which included an extreme flooding event). The cost of building such a regional-scale sharing infrastructure for redistributing water was found to be competitive to the lost revenue due to reduced coal production. The capital cost could potentially be further reduced by using existing water pipelines – such as those used for coal seam gas water management – or considering cheap transporting options. Once the sharing infrastructure has been installed, it can prevent periodic suffering of mines from climate extremes. Combined with an actively regulated discharge strategy, the water sharing approach could almost completely eliminate the unregulated discharge and maintain mine water storages at a secure level. The capital and operational cost for the combined approach can be considerably reduced and the shared water could be stored at other sites (mines, water holding ponds from coal seam gas industry) and used for water-limited periods. This is the first work that explores the theoretical potential of mine water sharing to mitigate the risk of unregulated discharge. The work presented here reveals that mine water sharing could help mine water managers respond to a sudden change in extremes such as switching from extreme ‘dry’ to extreme ‘wet’ conditions. A combined mine water sharing strategy would be worth considering by mine water managers, due to its advantages in regards to safety, relatively lower implementation costs, its effectiveness of reducing unregulated discharge that may cause environmental harm and conserving excess water for future water-limited periods. The ultimate value of water savings through a sharing scheme may be considerable as it influences mining industry's social license-to-operate in the long term, especially under conditions where there is a water security issue of decreasing availability and increasing competition. The work also highlights the benefits of systems modeling in supporting mine water managers with strategic decision making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Carbon footprint scenarios for renewable electricity in Australia.
- Author
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Wolfram, Paul, Wiedmann, Thomas, and Diesendorf, Mark
- Subjects
- *
ELECTRIC utilities , *ECOLOGICAL impact , *CARBON dioxide mitigation , *RENEWABLE energy sources , *GREENHOUSE gas mitigation - Abstract
Despite considerable mitigation efforts, global emissions from the electricity sector continued to grow in recent years. In Australia, the electricity sector is the largest CO 2 -emitting industry, contributing 35% of the country's total greenhouse gas emissions. The Australian government targets an 80% reduction of greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 relative to 2010. With a large variety and quantity of renewable energy resources, it is technically feasible and seems indispensable that Australia's electricity sector be largely decarbonised by 2050 in order to achieve this target. In this paper, scenario-based hybrid Life-Cycle Assessment is applied to calculate the economy-wide carbon footprints of seven electricity generation technologies in scenarios with differing renewable electricity penetration. This work is the first to apply a full life-cycle approach to scenario analysis of electricity generation in Australia. The findings are at the higher end of previously reported carbon footprint intensity ranges and above median values. However, even when taking into account indirect emissions along the technologies' life-cycles, the results indicate that the employment of different renewable energy technologies can potentially save a considerable fraction of Australia's greenhouse gas emissions. This makes renewables an essential option for climate change mitigation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Risks and tensions in water industry innovation: understanding adoption of decentralised water systems from a socio-technical transitions perspective.
- Author
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Quezada, George, Walton, Andrea, and Sharma, Ashok
- Subjects
- *
INNOVATIONS in business , *DECENTRALIZATION in management , *END users (Information technology) , *ENVIRONMENTAL policy , *MUNICIPAL water supply , *WATER utilities , *MANAGEMENT - Abstract
Globally, centralised urban water systems are under pressure to respond to environmental and economic pressures. In Australia, high infrastructure costs and variable rainfall have prompted governments, end-users and property developers to begin investing in more decentralised systems that use alternative water sources (rainwater, stormwater and wastewater). This trend is based on a fit-for-purpose principle and is part of a global shift toward sustainable urban water management. These developments suggest that Australia's urban water sector may be in the early stages of transition and represent a multi-decadal shift from centralisation of water supply and sanitation to partial decentralisation based on local conditions. Much of the scholarship on decentralised systems focuses on drivers and barriers to adoption, which implies a static and mechanistic process of change, and overlooks the complex interplay between exogenous pressures, innovation, multiple actors and industry reform. This paper addresses this gap by analysing temporal processes of Australia's urban water sector, using a regionally based case study comprising an historical review and interview study that analyses the multi-level, -decadal and -actor developments at the nexus between water service provision and property development. The analysis revealed emerging tensions between incumbent water utilities, property developers and end-users, and an inherent conflict between neo-liberal and environmental policy agendas. Such tensions and conflicts are missing from urban water policy and research discourse. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Strategies for education for sustainable development – Danish and Australian perspectives.
- Author
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Holgaard, Jette Egelund, Hadgraft, Roger, Kolmos, Anette, and Guerra, Aida
- Subjects
- *
SUSTAINABLE development , *PROBLEM-based learning , *ENGINEERING education , *ENGINEERS , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges - Abstract
If engineers are to provide sustainable innovations for future societies, engineers should be able to think and act beyond pure technical competence. This is stressed in political and accreditation frameworks all over the world, and universities are trying to respond to this demand. However, in many cases, sustainability practices seem fragmented and there is a lack of knowledge of strategies and few clear examples of good practice. In this paper, activities to integrate sustainability in two engineering institutions, one in Denmark and one in Australia, are systematically compared to provide an understanding of different kinds of activities and their internal as well as external enablers. A conceptual framework to provide overview of education for sustainability activities and their enablers has been proposed, where activities are related to actors and resources at both university and national levels. The conceptual framework has been developed iteratively – moving back and forth trying to find a suitable structure to capture the contextual pillars of the activities in the two cases, using state-of-art within the research field of education for sustainable development to fill out potential blind spots in the case-material and, finally, continuously shaping the storylines in the two cases to provide the needed overview and understanding of the similarities and differences of the approaches. The interplay between the framework and the case-stories provides a platform for change, as the framework does not only create an overview of activities, it also points out potential routes not taken, and the case studies provide examples of activities, which can be transferred with careful consideration to the internal as well as external context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Comparison of sustainable community rating tools in Australia.
- Author
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Xia, Bo, Chen, Qing, Skitmore, Martin, Zuo, Jian, and Li, Mei
- Subjects
- *
SUSTAINABILITY , *URBAN planning , *COMMUNITIES , *ENVIRONMENTAL engineering , *GREEN business - Abstract
The community is the basic unit of urban development, and appropriate assessment tools are needed for communities to evaluate and facilitate decision making concerning sustainable community development and reduce the detrimental effects of urban community actions on the environment. Existing research into sustainable community rating tools focuses primarily on those that are internationally recognized to describe their advantages and future challenges. However, the differences between rating tools due to different regional conditions, situations and characteristics have yet to be addressed. In doing this, this paper examines three sustainable community rating tools in Australia, namely Green Star-Communities PILOT, EnviroDevelopment and VicUrban Sustainability Charter (Master Planned Community Assessment Tool). In order to identify their similarities, differences and advantages these are compared in terms of sustainability coverage, prerequisites, adaptation to locality, scoring and weighting, participation, presentation of results, and application process. These results provide the stakeholders of sustainable community development projects with a better understanding of the available rating tools in Australia and assist with evaluation and decision making. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Air quality monitoring based on chemical and meteorological drivers: Application of a novel data filtering-based hybridized deep learning model.
- Author
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Jamei, Mehdi, Ali, Mumtaz, Malik, Anurag, Karbasi, Masoud, Sharma, Ekta, and Yaseen, Zaher Mundher
- Subjects
- *
AIR quality monitoring , *DEEP learning , *AIR quality indexes , *COAL-fired power plants , *PARTICULATE matter , *COALBED methane , *AIR quality , *FLY ash - Abstract
Particulate matter (PM) or particle pollution include the tiny particles of dust and fly ash particles are expelled from coal-burning power plants. Coal combustion is an extremely prevalent source of air pollution, and resulting PM has substantial impacts on human health, especially in industrial zones. This paper aims to design a novel hybrid deep learning framework based on long short-term memory (LSTM) integrated with a two-stage data filtering technique to accurately predict the air quality indices (i.e., PM 2.5 and PM 10) in a chosen study region 'Miles Airport, Queensland,' that meets the needs of the coal seam gas industry in Australia. The data used to construct the novel hybrid two-stage data filtering technique based on LSTM comprising of six meteorological parameters (i.e., wind direction, wind speed, air temperature, relative humidity, solar radiation, and rainfall) and two environmental factors (i.e., ozone and total suspended particulate). In the first stage, two robust feature selection methods, namely, extreme gradient boosting (XGBoost) and the classification and regression tree (CART) approach, were adopted to explore the most significant predictors. Then in the second stage, the best subset regression (BSR) technique is utilized to determine the best subsets input combinations i.e., C1, C2, and C3 based on several particular metrics. The three BSR-based input combinations were employed in the LSTM model to estimate the PM 2.5 and PM 10. Furthermore, to validate the main hybrid framework, two advanced machine learning (ML) methods (i.e., LightGBM and ridge kernel regression (KRR)) and two traditional ML methods (i.e., Adaptive neuro-fuzzy inference system (ANFIS) and multilayer perceptron neural network (MLP)) were hybridized with the multi-level data filtering strategy by examining the optimal input combinations. Several statistical metrics, graphical tools, and diagnostic analyses evaluated the hybrid models. The outcomes of the PM 2.5 simulation based on 2375 data samples showed that the LSTM-C3 containing all the selected predictors yielded the most promising accuracy, followed by the LightGBM-C3 and MLP-C3 models. On the other hand, the simulation of PM 10 distribution demonstrated that the LSTM-C3 was superior to other models, followed by the KRR-C3 and LightGBM-C3 models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Corporate Sustainability Indicators: an Australian Mining Case Study.
- Author
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Lodhia, Sumit and Martin, Nigel
- Subjects
- *
SUSTAINABLE development reporting , *MINERAL industries , *STAKEHOLDERS , *SOCIAL indicators , *ENVIRONMENTAL indicators , *BUSINESS analysts - Abstract
Corporate Sustainability Indicators (CSI) provide the potential to integrate economic, social and environmental information. This research developed CSI for a major Australian diversified resources company and engaged with expert stakeholders in determining the indicators' value and explanatory capacity. It was found that these CSI integrate the company's reported economic, social and environmental issues into specific usable trend markers for business and environmental analysts. The findings provided support for these indicators at a general, as well as at a specific, project level. This paper highlights that the use of these indicators will assist in the management of the company and in informing stakeholders, particularly with regard to corporate impacts on the environment, climate and broader society. It is also suggested that for corporate sustainability indicators to be effectively utilized, there is a need for consensus among organizations and their stakeholders in relation to the use of these indicators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Factors influencing the use of the World Wide Web for sustainability communication: an Australian mining perspective.
- Author
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Lodhia, Sumit
- Subjects
- *
MINERAL industries , *WORLD Wide Web , *SUSTAINABILITY , *COMMUNICATION in management , *STAKEHOLDERS , *MINERAL industries & the environment ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
The World Wide Web can enhance the communication of social and environmental issues, commonly referred to as sustainability communication. This paper explored the factors that influence the use of the web for sustainability communication. Previous literature identified economic factors, internal organisational factors and external stakeholder influences as particularly influential. This case study, in the context of three Australian mining companies, and through the use of interviews and website monitoring, expands upon the literature by confirming these factors and by identifying two additional factors that impact the corporate use of the web for sustainability communications. These are referred to as the “double-edged sword” and organisational restructuring. This study, through a focus on a particular communication medium, the web, and a socially and environmentally sensitive industry, the Australian minerals industry, highlighted that the impact of the medium used for sustainability communication requires conceptual insights that extend beyond the current understanding of sustainability accounting and reporting. In addition to this theoretical contribution, this study contributes to the emerging web-based sustainability communication literature, and provides insights to companies and their stakeholders into future use of the web for communication of social and environmental issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Environmental impacts of consumption of Australian red wine in the UK.
- Author
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Amienyo, David, Camilleri, Cecil, and Azapagic, Adisa
- Subjects
- *
WINE industry , *GLOBAL warming , *ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis , *RED wines , *PRODUCT life cycle , *CARBON dioxide mitigation - Abstract
Abstract: The UK consumes almost 5% of world's wine production, drinking 12.9 million hectolitres annually or 21 l per capita per year. Australian wines are most popular with the UK consumer, accounting for around 17% of total take-home purchases. This paper focuses on Australian red wine and presents the life cycle environmental impacts of its consumption in the UK. The results indicate that a 0.75 l bottle of wine requires, for example, 21 MJ of primary energy, 363 l of water and generates 1.25 kg of CO2 eq. For the annual consumption of Australian red wine, this translates to around 3.5 PJ of energy, 600 million hectolitres of water and 210,000 t CO2 eq. Viticulture and wine distribution are the main hot spots contributing over 70% to the environmental impacts considered. Shipping in bulk rather than bottled wine would reduce the global warming potential (GWP) by 13%, equivalent to 27,000 t CO2 eq. annually. For every 10% increase in recycled glass content in bottles, the GWP would be reduced by 2% or 3600 t CO2 eq./yr; the savings in other environmental impacts are smaller (0.7–1.5%). A 10% decrease in bottle weight would reduce the impacts by 3–7%; for the GWP, the saving would be 4% or 7000 t CO2 eq./yr. If only 10% of the wine was packaged in cartons instead of glass bottles, the GWP savings would be 5% or 10,600 t CO2 eq./yr; the other impacts would also be reduced by 2–7%. These measures could together save at least 48,000 t CO2 eq./yr, almost a quarter of the current emissions from the UK consumption of Australian red wine. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. An evaluation of integrated spatial technology framework for greenhouse gas mitigation in grain production in Western Australia.
- Author
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Engelbrecht, Deborah, Biswas, Wahidul K., and Ahmad, Waqar
- Subjects
- *
SPATIAL analysis (Statistics) , *GREENHOUSE gas mitigation , *GRAIN growth , *AGRICULTURAL productivity , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
Abstract: The International Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) predicts an increase of 0.2 °C per decade for the next two decades in global temperatures and a rise of between 1.5 and 4.5 °C by the year 2100. Related to the increase in world temperatures is the increase in Greenhouse Gases (GHGs) which are primarily made up of carbon dioxide (CO2), nitrous oxide (N2O), methane (CH4) and fluorinated gases. In 2004, the GHGs from agriculture contributed 14% of the overall global GHGs made up mainly of methane (CH4) and nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions. In Australia, the dominant source of CH4 and N2O emissions for the year ending June 2012 was found to be from the agricultural sector. With the recent introduction of the Clean Energy Act 2011, the agricultural sector of Australia is expected to develop appropriate GHG mitigation strategies to maintain and improve its competitiveness in the green commodity market. This paper proposes the use of Integrated Spatial Technologies (IST) framework by linking Life Cycle Assessment (LCA), Remote Sensing (RS) and Geographical Information Systems (GIS). The IST approach also integrates and highlights the use of Cleaner Production (CP) strategies for the formulation and application of cost-effective GHG mitigation options for grain production in Western Australia (WA). In this study, the IST framework was tested using data from an existing study (the baseline study) and two mitigation options. The analysis results revealed production and use of fertiliser as the “hotspot”, and for mitigation purposes was replaced with pig manure in option 1, whereas option 2 emphasised crop rotation system/s. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Cradle to retailer or quick service restaurant gate life cycle assessment of chicken products in Australia
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Bengtsson, Jonas and Seddon, Julia
- Subjects
- *
FAST food restaurants , *PRODUCT life cycle assessment , *POULTRY products , *ENVIRONMENTAL impact charges , *ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis , *SUPPLY chains - Abstract
Abstract: This paper presents the results of the cradle to retailer or quick service restaurant gate life cycle assessment (LCA) of chicken production by Inghams Enterprises, a major poultry producer in Australia. The aim of this study was to identify environmental hot spots in order to reduce impacts and costs, improve products, processes and supply chains for Inghams. Of specific interest to Inghams was the comparative environmental impact of conventional and free-range chicken production. Foreground data were obtained from Inghams'' internal and external reports and guidelines for litter emission factors; background data were sourced from the Australian and international databases and modeled in the SimaPro software. The life cycle impact assessment includes 12 environmental impact categories (abiotic resource depletion; acidification; eco-toxicity; eutrophication; global warming; human toxicity; ionizing radiation; land transformation and use; ozone depletion; photochemical smog; respiratory effects; and water depletion), characterized at midpoint, normalized per capita Australia and weighted into Australian ecopoints for overall impact. The ecopoint scale is that 100 points equal the average Australian''s annual weighted impact. Allocation of impact between co-products was based on the associated economic wholesale price of roast chicken and breast fillet in relation to the average overall production output value. The allocated impact per product was calculated to 11.4 and 12.4 ecopoints per ton of roast chicken and 35.2 and 33.4 ecopoints per ton of breast fillet for free-range and conventional production respectively. Upstream feed production is the largest impact area of the chicken meat supply chain, contributing approximately half of the overall impact and two thirds of the overall water consumed for chicken meat. Poultry farm operation contributes approximately one third of the overall impact, primarily from manure emissions and energy used in chicken housing, and over half of non-renewable energy consumption. Meat processing is the third largest impact source with approximately 10% of the overall impact. All other life cycle stages, including feed mill operations, hatcheries, packaging and distribution combine to less than 10% of the overall impact. The results highlight the importance of productivity measures, such as feed conversion ratio (FCR), energy efficiency and clean energy provision for facility operations, but also adoption of low-impact agricultural practices downstream from Inghams'' operations. Several LCA studies of poultry production and products have been published. The most common unit for comparison is the calculated life-cycle global warming potential, typically assessed from cradle to farm gate or retail. Often sufficiently detailed information of the assumptions behind meat processing and allocation approach is missing in cradle to retail or consumer studies. Attempts to benchmark the study results emphasized the need for a consistent and level playing field methodology for the food sector in order for LCA to provide meaningful and reliable input into businesses decision-making and for product comparisons. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Bio-production from Australian sugarcane: an environmental investigation of product diversification in an agro-industry
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Renouf, Marguerite A., Pagan, Robert J., and Wegener, Malcolm K.
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- *
SUGARCANE industry , *BIOMASS production , *AGRICULTURAL diversification , *GLOBAL warming , *BIOLOGICAL products , *ENVIRONMENTAL protection - Abstract
Abstract: This paper assesses the environmental impacts of producing bio-energy, bio-fuels and bio-materials from Australian sugarcane (Saccharum officinarum), and nominates the bio-production pathways offering the best environmental gains. A system-based, consequential approach was taken, which is different to past approaches that have commonly judged bio-production by comparing individual bio-products with their fossil-fuel counterparts. Possible diversified scenarios were developed, and the changes in environmental impacts from the system as a whole (per 100 t sugarcane processed) were assessed using life cycle assessment (LCA). Scenarios based on utilisation of co-products from existing sugarcane production (ethanol from molasses, and electricity and ethanol from surplus bagasse) were found to give modest reductions in non-renewable energy (NRE) use and global warming potential (GWP), and involve no or few trade-offs. Of these, ethanol and electricity from bagasse offer the best benefits. Scenarios necessitating expanded cane growing for dedicated production of ethanol and polylactide (PLA) plastics from cane juice were found to result in more substantial NRE and GWP savings, but involve the trade-offs associated with expanded agricultural production (land use, water use and potential water quality impacts). Of these, PLA production offers the better outcomes, amongst the scenarios. However, eco-efficient cane growing was found to be an equally important improvement strategy and should be implemented to enhance the benefits and mitigate some of the trade-off from bio-production. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Life cycle assessment: a time-series analysis of copper
- Author
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Memary, Reza, Giurco, Damien, Mudd, Gavin, and Mason, Leah
- Subjects
- *
TIME series analysis , *ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis , *COPPER mining , *ENERGY development , *ECOLOGICAL impact - Abstract
Abstract: This paper presents a time-series Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) approach to examine the historical environmental impacts associated with copper mining and smelting in Australia from 1940 to 2008. It uses cradle-to-gate LCA models to estimate impacts from the five largest Australian copper mines, incorporating changes in ore grade and differences in technologies and regional energy sources. Using copper as an example of the different life-cycle impacts of metals, this study demonstrates the influence of both temporal and spatial factors. For mine/smelters, results show that the carbon footprint of copper produced at all sites over the time period investigated ranges from 2.5 to 8.5 kg CO2-eq./kg Cu and the difference between different locations in any given year can be up to 6 kg CO2-eq./kg Cu. The estimated impact potentials derived from the LCA models for Australia''s largest mine/smelter at Olympic Dam are then compared to impacts reported by mine operators for global warming potential and acidification. The results of the LCA analysis indicate the importance of considering time-varying parameters and highlight an opportunity to use LCA models more broadly for assessing future technology and energy options in the mineral sector. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Self-reported judgements of management and governance issues in stormwater and greywater systems
- Author
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Naylor, Timothy, Moglia, Magnus, Grant, Andrew L., and Sharma, Ashok K.
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GRAYWATER (Domestic wastewater) , *SELF-evaluation , *URBAN runoff management , *EMPIRICAL research , *QUANTITATIVE research , *WATER consumption , *PERFORMANCE evaluation - Abstract
Abstract: Empirical evidence on how to best operate and maintain greywater and stormwater systems is needed. Therefore, a survey was developed to explore operational and maintenance requirements of these systems. This paper reports on quantitative and qualitative methods used to determine attributes of “effective” greywater and stormwater systems in Australia, according to the management issue criteria used in the framework. Managers of stormwater and greywater systems were asked their opinion on the technical reliability, financial success, reduction in freshwater consumption and satisfaction of the end-user of the system. The data has then been analysed to determine which managing agency and predominant employee type manage to contribute significantly towards enhanced system performance according the prescribed criteria, while also accounting for the relative technical complexity of each system. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Web based social and environmental communication in the Australian minerals industry: an application of media richness framework
- Author
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lodhia, Sumit
- Subjects
- *
MINERAL industries , *WORLD Wide Web , *MEDIA richness theory (Communication) , *COMMUNICATION , *MINING corporations - Abstract
Abstract: This paper considers the potential of the World Wide Web (web) as a medium for communicating social and environmental issues in the Australian minerals industry. The media richness framework was used to assess the communication potential of the web. The communication of social and environmental issues on websites of three Australian mining companies was analysed over a period of time. Interviews were also conducted with sustainability and communication managers from these companies. Findings suggest that companies are still learning about web based social and environmental communication. There was varying usage of different web capabilities across the three companies. Managers were willing to utilise the organisational and mass communication capabilities of the web more than its timeliness and presentation features. Limited consideration was given to the interactive potential of the web. It was also found that certain social considerations could limit the use of the web for social and environmental communication. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Availability, addiction and alternatives: three criteria for assessing the impact of peak minerals on society
- Author
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Mason, Leah, Prior, Timothy, Mudd, Gavin, and Giurco, Damien
- Subjects
- *
HUBBERT peak theory , *NATURAL resources , *MINERALS , *ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis , *ENVIRONMENTAL indicators - Abstract
Abstract: The concept of ‘peaks’ in the production of natural resources has attracted attention in the area of energy production, with concerns about ‘peak oil’ driving recent research and investment in alternative sources of energy. There are fundamental and important differences between a peak in the production of oil and peaks in the production of metalliferous minerals, but in both cases production changes from ‘easier and less expensive’ early in a resource’s life to ‘difficult and expensive’ as time progresses. The impacts of this change in production circumstances require critical consideration in the governance of national and sub-national mineral endowments. This paper develops a framework for evaluating the impacts of changing patterns of mineral production. The framework considers three criteria: availability of a resource (considering its geological characteristics and geographical distribution); society’s addiction to the resource (its centrality and criticality to economic, social and environmental systems); and the possibility of finding alternatives (whether the resource can be substituted or recovered). An initial assessment against these criteria provides an overview of how a production peak might affect the production of minerals in Australia and the impacts that this might have on the Australian economy. Assessing important resources against these three criteria will be imperative in future considerations regarding the roles minerals and metals play as service providers in our economic, social and environmental systems. Additionally, this analysis should prompt a reassessment of the value of minerals beyond economic measures. Indicators derived from these criteria will inform strategies that can address future changes in production characteristics – meeting challenges with strong governance, and realising opportunities with proactive policy. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Comparing the implementation of concrete recycling in the Australian and Japanese construction industries
- Author
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Tam, Vivian W.Y.
- Subjects
- *
WASTE recycling , *CONSTRUCTION industry & the environment , *CONCRETE , *WASTE management , *FINANCIAL aid , *CONSTRUCTION industry standards - Abstract
Abstract: Environmental problems have been considered to be serious in the construction industry. Waste management pressures are pressing very hard with alarming industrial warming signals. Among the different types of construction and demolition wastes, concrete is about 81 percent of the volume of construction and demolition waste in Australia. To minimize the concrete waste generated from construction activities, recycling of concrete waste is one of the best methods to improve the environment. However, situations of concrete recycling in different countries vary considerably. Japan is a leading country in recycling concrete waste, with 100 percent recycling of the wastes that are used for new structural applications. This paper investigates the current concrete recycling situations in Australian and Japanese construction industries. A questionnaire survey and structured interviews were conducted. In comparing the current concrete recycling situations between Australia and Japan, it should be noted that major difficulties found from Australian and Japanese construction industries are on different phases of the transition to recycling of construction wastes. Therefore, it is suggested that the Australian construction industry should be: i) developing a unified policy in concrete recycling; ii) providing financial governmental support; iii) developing clear technical specifications or standards on the use of recycled aggregate for structural applications. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Understanding decision-making in regenerative precinct developments.
- Author
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Craft, William, Ding, Lan, and Prasad, Deo
- Subjects
- *
BUILT environment , *DECISION making , *COEVOLUTION - Abstract
There is growing consensus that to effectively respond to the urgency of the global climate emergency we require a new model of what it means to be sustainable. Regenerative development provides a compelling alternative by seeking to realign our efforts in a participatory and co-evolutionary relationship with nature to create the conditions necessary for a healthy life into the future. Practical applications of regenerative development have therefore begun to emerge, especially at a precinct scale. However, few studies have investigated the underlying processes and decisions that have enabled their emergence. This paper conducts a qualitative investigation into the decision-making approaches of four case study precincts across Australia that are aligned with regenerative development to provide the foundation to inform future decision-making practices in the built environment. Key findings of this investigation are presented as themes that help provide an understanding of the key decisions that can enable a precinct to achieve its positive value adding potential. These key findings are seen as an important first step towards informing the future development of a decision-making framework for regenerative precinct development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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