Product carbon footprinting in Thailand: A step towards sustainable consumption and production?

Journal article


Authors/Editors


Strategic Research Themes

No matching items found.


Publication Details

Author listMungkung R., Gheewala S.H., Kanyarushoki C., Hospido A., van der Werf H., Poovarodom N., Bonnet S., Aubin J., Teresa Moreira M., Feijoo G.

PublisherElsevier

Publication year2012

JournalEnvironmental Development (2211-4645)

Volume number3

Issue number1

Start page100

End page108

Number of pages9

ISSN2211-4645

eISSN2211-4653

URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84863886084&doi=10.1016%2fj.envdev.2012.03.019&partnerID=40&md5=5223d71a82a16e5bcfefdcf453b146df

LanguagesEnglish-Great Britain (EN-GB)


View on publisher site


Abstract

Thailand as one of the global food exporting countries shares the worldwide concerns on climate change and initiated carbon footprinting and labeling in 2008. Individual quick frozen fried chicken meat and canned tuna in sunflower oil were selected as the pioneering case studies for carbon footprinting using the PAS 2050:2008 standard. It was revealed that broiler farm and tuna fisheries are the key stages contributing significantly to the total carbon footprint of the two products considered. The study also revealed the need for using representative data of raw materials according to the local context requiring the urgent development of agricultural and food databases. The rules of using substitute data must also be clearly defined. The industry argued for using a mass instead of the economic basis required by PAS 2050:2008 in allocating the carbon footprint to chicken parts and tuna white and red meat. The commitment of producers to reduce the size of carbon footprint is suggested to be emphasized for carbon labeling rather than displaying a carbon footprint value to avoid the comparison between products. Product Category Rules (PCRs) should be developed with stakeholder consultations and harmonized at the global scale. ฉ 2012 Elsevier B.V.


Keywords

Carbon labelingPAS 2050Product category rules


Last updated on 2023-04-10 at 07:36