Life Cycle Assessment of Olive Oil Tin and Plastic Containers

For a long period of time, Palestine has witnessed significantly noticeable shortages and scarcities of natural resources, namely, water and energy resources. Many industries adversely contribute in the continuous consumption and depletion of such natural resources. Among these, there are the packag...

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Main Author: Yahya Saleh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: An-Najah National University 2014-09-01
Series:مجلة جامعة النجاح للأبحاث العلوم الطبيعية
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Online Access:https://journals.najah.edu/media/journals/full_texts/1_QiQiXS5.pdf
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author Yahya Saleh
author_facet Yahya Saleh
author_sort Yahya Saleh
collection DOAJ
description For a long period of time, Palestine has witnessed significantly noticeable shortages and scarcities of natural resources, namely, water and energy resources. Many industries adversely contribute in the continuous consumption and depletion of such natural resources. Among these, there are the packaging materials industries producing plastic and metal packaging containers for holding liquid products. Examples of such containers are tin and plastic containers used for packaging and storing olive oil in Palestine. These primary two packaging systems differ in their environmental impacts during the stages of processing, manufacturing, distribution, transportation, usage and disposal. More specifically, they differ in consumption of natural resources such as water, energy, and land use (solid wastes generation), as well as in their contribution to human toxicity and health problems (dust) and resulted industrial noise. This work aims at evaluating and comparing the potential environmental impacts of tin and plastic containers of olive oil via employing life cycle assessment (LCA) based on International Standardization Organization (ISO) standards (namely, ISO 14040, ISO 14041, ISO14042, and ISO 14043). The life cycle inventory and impact assessments considered the above-mentioned significant environmental domains (water, energy, solid waste, dust and industrial noise) in conducting the LCA. Within the boundaries of both systems, the LCA analysis showed that tin containers (16 Ls) outperformed plastic containers (16 L) in terms of having less environmental impacts.
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spelling doaj-art-fe66b4ef888246fb9818b7e8bc4338522025-08-20T02:56:27ZengAn-Najah National Universityمجلة جامعة النجاح للأبحاث العلوم الطبيعية1727-21142311-88652014-09-0129112410.35552/anujr.a.29.1.1155Life Cycle Assessment of Olive Oil Tin and Plastic ContainersYahya Saleh0Industrial Mechanical Engineering Department, Faculty of Engineering and Information Technology, An-Najah National University, Nablus, PalestineFor a long period of time, Palestine has witnessed significantly noticeable shortages and scarcities of natural resources, namely, water and energy resources. Many industries adversely contribute in the continuous consumption and depletion of such natural resources. Among these, there are the packaging materials industries producing plastic and metal packaging containers for holding liquid products. Examples of such containers are tin and plastic containers used for packaging and storing olive oil in Palestine. These primary two packaging systems differ in their environmental impacts during the stages of processing, manufacturing, distribution, transportation, usage and disposal. More specifically, they differ in consumption of natural resources such as water, energy, and land use (solid wastes generation), as well as in their contribution to human toxicity and health problems (dust) and resulted industrial noise. This work aims at evaluating and comparing the potential environmental impacts of tin and plastic containers of olive oil via employing life cycle assessment (LCA) based on International Standardization Organization (ISO) standards (namely, ISO 14040, ISO 14041, ISO14042, and ISO 14043). The life cycle inventory and impact assessments considered the above-mentioned significant environmental domains (water, energy, solid waste, dust and industrial noise) in conducting the LCA. Within the boundaries of both systems, the LCA analysis showed that tin containers (16 Ls) outperformed plastic containers (16 L) in terms of having less environmental impacts.https://journals.najah.edu/media/journals/full_texts/1_QiQiXS5.pdfiso 14040-14043olive oillife cycle assessmenttin containers.plastic containers
spellingShingle Yahya Saleh
Life Cycle Assessment of Olive Oil Tin and Plastic Containers
مجلة جامعة النجاح للأبحاث العلوم الطبيعية
iso 14040-14043
olive oil
life cycle assessment
tin containers.
plastic containers
title Life Cycle Assessment of Olive Oil Tin and Plastic Containers
title_full Life Cycle Assessment of Olive Oil Tin and Plastic Containers
title_fullStr Life Cycle Assessment of Olive Oil Tin and Plastic Containers
title_full_unstemmed Life Cycle Assessment of Olive Oil Tin and Plastic Containers
title_short Life Cycle Assessment of Olive Oil Tin and Plastic Containers
title_sort life cycle assessment of olive oil tin and plastic containers
topic iso 14040-14043
olive oil
life cycle assessment
tin containers.
plastic containers
url https://journals.najah.edu/media/journals/full_texts/1_QiQiXS5.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT yahyasaleh lifecycleassessmentofoliveoiltinandplasticcontainers