The use of the life cycle assessment (LCA) conception for Mittal Steel Poland SA energy generation - Krakow plant case study

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Abstract

Life cycle assessment (LCA) is an environmental methodology for assessing the environmental effects associated with a product, process or activity and is useful as an information tool for the examination of different scenarios for future decision support strategies. This paper provides an overview of LCA and life cycle inventory (LCI) techniques for energy production proposed for the Power Plant of Mittal Steel Poland in Krakow, Poland. In this paper, an energy medium generation scenario is presented, including electric energy, technology practice steam, blast to iron blast furnace, hot water, demineralizing and degassing water for hot rolling mill, BOF blast oxygen furnace (BOF), cokery, as well as steel continuous casting and BOF. In this paper LCA is limited to the inventory analysis., i.e. the determination the environmental interventions. Environmental interventions are defined within the LCA-methodology as the exchanges between the anthroposphere (economy) and the environment including resources use, emission to air, water, or soil [5].

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APA

Bieda, B. (2007). The use of the life cycle assessment (LCA) conception for Mittal Steel Poland SA energy generation - Krakow plant case study. WIT Transactions on Ecology and the Environment, 105, 165–174. https://doi.org/10.2495/ESUS070171

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