2024 AIChE Annual Meeting
(261d) Establishing the Framework for a Process Systems Sustainability Index
Authors
Frameworks such as life cycle assessment, impact assessment, and the triple bottom line provide approaches to quantify, understand, and implement sustainability concepts. Many studies have expanded on these frameworks to provide a variety of methods to quantify sustainability in industry, with various strengths and weaknesses for each. The key strengths, weaknesses, and resulting opportunities of these various methodologies will be discussed. To determine the validity of existing metrics, the consistency of their results must be compared. When utilizing existing sustainability indices, significant variation was found both in the final quantification of sustainability for a single process, and in the determination of a more sustainable process when comparing two processes. These inconsistencies imply the need for additional considerations within the various indices. From the analysis of existing indices, it was determined that sustainability metrics for process industry sustainability to this point have lacked an inclusion of safety, time dependence, and quantification of the interrelations between sustainability pillars.
As process safety incidents are so intricately tied to process economic feasibility, environmental impacts, and societal acceptance, it is determined that process safety is a key aspect of process sustainability that has been disregarded until recently. This work proposes that process safety is on par with the economic, environmental, and societal aspects of sustainability for the process industry, and therefore sustainability metrics in the area should expand the triple bottom line for the basis of their methodologies. Additionally, when a process is impacted in one of these four key aspects of sustainability, the impact on other aspects should be quantified. In the case of a process safety incident, key indicators in the economic, environmental, and societal sustainability of a process will be impacted, and any sustainability metric should reflect these cascading effects.
This work proposes a framework to establish a sustainability index for the process industry. This framework utilizes an expanded triple bottom line (environmental, economic, societal, safety pillars) and the driving force, pressure, state, exposure, effect, action (DPSEEA) method to establish and categorize indicators. Then, interrelations are established between the sustainability pillars within the expanded triple bottom line, and the interpretive structural modeling method is used to establish a hierarchy of dependence and influence of the different indicators on one another. This framework establishes a foundation that will be expanded upon to quantify sustainability within the process industry.