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Thank you for opening this @bl-young , and for all the effort that you guys do here! I can share our experience with this type of flows. We are big fans of how your flowlist cleanly structures elementary flows. It's much more homogeneous than other elementary flow lists. For that reason, we use it as our standard nomenclature, and interpret all data (e.g. datasets like Ecoinvent, or methods like ReCiPe, PEF, etc) using your flowlist. We've encountered that any information about the "biogenic" nature of greenhouse emissions gets lost in this translation. Ecoinvent has such information, but we can't represent it (to our knowledge) in terms of the flowlist. In some impact assessment methods, we would also have those flows be treated differently for different impact categories (e.g. the most common modelings of IPCC for LCA). We of course can't do that if that information gets lost. Do I understand correctly that there's a formal decision not to include biogenic flows? Can you share what the rational is for such a decision? |
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We're contemplating different ways of handling this context, but some of them may be relevant for FEDEFL itself. The ideas so far have been:
@bl-young I would love to hear your view on this. At the moment, we're unfortunately exploring the last option, but it's our least preferred one, since we'd be diverging from FEDEFL, and it creates an incentive for us to use a different nomenclature instead (to guarantee interchangeability). |
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Users regularly inquire about how to track biogenic flows (e.g., "Carbon dioxide, biogenic"). The FEDEFL does not contain any biogenic flows. This discussion is intended to document that decision and receive feedback.
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