Life cycle assessment of an energy-economy nexus: The case of Israel and South Korea

被引:5
|
作者
Yu, Hojin [1 ]
Pearlmutter, David [2 ]
Schwartz, Moshe [2 ]
机构
[1] Ben Gurion Univ Negev, Ben Gurion Inst Study Israel & Zionism, Beer Sheva, Israel
[2] Ben Gurion Univ Negev, Jacob Blaustein Inst Desert Res, Bona Terra Dept Man Desert, Beer Sheva, Israel
关键词
Life cycle assessment; Input-output analysis; Energy consumption; Trade relations; Israel; Korea; DEVELOPMENTAL STATE; CONSUMPTION;
D O I
10.1016/j.eiar.2017.12.001
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Israel and South Korea have both achieved rapid economic growth since their post-war establishment, and among the common challenges that the two countries have faced is a conspicuous lack of domestic oil supplies. Although this chronic energy scarcity has not impeded the economic trajectory of either country, it has influenced their industrial structures in strikingly different ways with Korea nevertheless developing a vast energy intensive manufacturing sector, while Israel has largely relied on its service sector to support a growing consumer society. While different in industrial structure, however, the two economies have been connected by intensive trade relations, meaning that energy is consumed in one country for the production of goods used in the other. In order to examine the economic and environmental implications of the two economies' structural divergence and bilateral trade relations, we use economic input-output analysis to track the life cycle (LC) energy consumption of passenger cars a product which has significant environmental impact due to energy consumption in both its production and use stages which were manufactured in Korea and exported to Israel during the period of 1997-2011. Our findings show that while most of the LC energy consumption of the vehicles occurs in Israel where the vehicle operation takes place, this does not mean that Israel's "avoided energy" by importing the Korean cars is insignificant. The embodied energy of vehicles traded in 2011 reached 3179 TJ, exceeding the amount of energy used by Israel's entire on-site building construction sector over the same period. If the Israeli economy had hypothetically developed its own auto manufacturing industry including secondary suppliers to meet domestic demand as well as exports as was done in Korea the energy consumption in those industries would be equivalent to about half of the current energy use by Israel's entire industrial sector.
引用
收藏
页码:61 / 69
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Comparative life cycle assessment of landfill gas utilization in South Korea with parametric uncertainties
    Kwon, Yuree
    An, Jinjoo
    RENEWABLE & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY REVIEWS, 2024, 198
  • [22] Development of a Life Cycle Assessment Program for building (SUSB-LCA) in South Korea
    Lee, Kanghee
    Tae, Sungho
    Shin, Sungwoo
    RENEWABLE & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY REVIEWS, 2009, 13 (08): : 1994 - 2002
  • [23] Proposal of Environmental Impact Assessment Method for Concrete in South Korea: An Application in LCA (Life Cycle Assessment)
    Kim, Tae Hyoung
    Tae, Sung Ho
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH, 2016, 13 (11):
  • [24] A hybrid energy-economy model for global integrated assessment of climate change, carbon mitigation and energy transformation
    Cai, Yiyong
    Newth, David
    Finnigan, John
    Gunasekera, Don
    APPLIED ENERGY, 2015, 148 : 381 - 395
  • [25] RECENT TRENDS IN LUBRICATING OIL TECHNOLOGY - ENERGY-ECONOMY IMPROVEMENT AND LONG LIFE OIL
    KASHIMA, M
    JOURNAL OF JAPAN SOCIETY OF LUBRICATION ENGINEERS, 1984, 29 (01): : 15 - 20
  • [26] PV Waste Management at the Crossroads of Circular Economy and Energy Transition: The Case of South Korea
    Kim, Hana
    Park, Hun
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2018, 10 (10)
  • [27] Integrating evolving energy economy scenarios in dynamic life cycle assessment of buildings
    Shanbhag, Sejal Sanjay
    Kumar, Manish
    ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT REVIEW, 2025, 112
  • [28] Spatial optimization of the food, energy, and water nexus: A life cycle assessment-based approach
    Yuan, Kuang-Yu
    Lin, Ying-Chen
    Chiueh, Pei-Te
    Lo, Shang-Lien
    ENERGY POLICY, 2018, 119 : 502 - 514
  • [29] A reduction in global impacts through a waste-wastewater-energy nexus: A life cycle assessment
    Mancini, G.
    Lombardi, L.
    Luciano, A.
    Bolzonella, D.
    Viotti, P.
    Fino, D.
    ENERGY, 2024, 289
  • [30] Metamodeling life cycle assessment to explore interactions in the water-energy nexus of desalination processes
    Aleisa, Esra
    ENERGY NEXUS, 2024, 15