CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — A typical pair of running shoes generates 30 pounds
of carbon dioxide emissions, equivalent to keeping a 100-watt light bulb
on for one week, according to a new MIT-led lifecycle assessment.
But
what’s surprising to researchers isn’t the size of a shoe’s carbon
footprint, but where the majority of that footprint comes from.
The
researchers found that more than two-thirds of a running shoe’s carbon
impact can come from manufacturing processes, with a smaller percentage
arising from acquiring or extracting raw materials. This breakdown is
expected for more complex products such as electronics, where the energy
that goes into manufacturing fine, integrated circuits can outweigh the
energy expended in processing raw materials. But for “less-advanced”
products — particularly those that don’t require electronic components —
the opposite is often the case.
So why does a pair of sneakers,
which may seem like a relatively simple product, emit so much more
carbon dioxide in its manufacturing phase?
A team led by
Randolph Kirchain, principal research scientist in MIT’s Materials
Systems Laboratory, and research scientist Elsa Olivetti broke down the
various steps involved in both materials extraction and manufacturing of
one pair of running shoes to identify hotspots of greenhouse-gas
emissions. The group found that much of the carbon impact came from
powering manufacturing plants: A significant portion of the world’s shoe
manufacturers are located in China, where coal is the dominant source
of electricity. Coal is also typically used to generate steam or run
other processes in the plant itself.
A typical pair of running
shoes comprises 65 discrete parts requiring more than 360 processing
steps to assemble, from sewing and cutting to injection molding, foaming
and heating. Olivetti, Kirchain and their colleagues found that for
these small, light components such processes are energy-intensive — and
therefore, carbon-intensive — compared with the energy that goes into
making shoe materials, such as polyester and polyurethane.
The
group’s results, Kirchain says, will help shoe designers identify ways
to improve designs and reduce shoes’ carbon footprint. He adds that the
findings may also help industries assess the carbon impact of similar
consumer products more efficiently.
“Understanding environmental
footprint is resource intensive. The key is, you need to put your
analytical effort into the areas that matter,” Kirchain says. “In
general, we found that if you have a product that has a relatively high
number of parts and process steps, and that is relatively light
[weight], then you want to make sure you don’t overlook manufacturing.”
Kirchain and his colleagues have published their results in the Journal of Cleaner Production.
The sum of a shoe’s parts
In
2010, nearly 25 billion shoes were purchased around the world, the
majority of them manufactured in China and other developing countries.
As Kirchain and his co-authors write in their paper, “An industry of
that scale and geographic footprint has come under great pressure
regarding its social and environmental impact.”
In response,
companies have started to take account of their products’ greenhouse-gas
contributions, in part by measuring the amount of carbon dioxide
associated with every process throughout a product’s lifecycle. One such
company, ASICS, an athletic equipment company based in Japan,
approached Kirchain to perform a lifecycle assessment for a running shoe
manufactured in China.
The team took a “cradle-to-grave”
approach, breaking down every possible greenhouse gas-emitting step:
from the point at which the shoes’ raw materials are extracted to the
shoes’ demise, whether burned, landfilled or recycled.
The
researchers divided the shoes’ lifecycle into five major stages:
materials, manufacturing, usage, transportation and end-of-life. These
last three stages, they found, contributed very little to the product’s
carbon footprint. For example, running shoes, unlike electronics,
require very little energy to use, aside from the energy needed to
infrequently wash the shoes.
The bulk of emissions, they found,
came from manufacturing. While part of the manufacturing footprint is
attributable to a facility’s energy source, other emissions came from
processes such as foaming and injection molding of parts of a sneaker’s
sole, which expend large amounts of energy in the manufacture of small,
lightweight parts. As Kirchain explains it, “You have a lot of effort
going into the molding of the material, but you’re only getting a very
small part out of that process.”
“What stood out was this
manufacturing burden being on par with materials, which we hadn’t seen
in similar products,” Olivetti adds. “Part of that is because it’s a
synthetic product. If we were looking at a leather shoe, it would be
much more materials-driven because of the carbon intensity of leather
production.”
An improved design
In
tallying the carbon emissions from every part of a running shoe’s
lifecycle, the researchers were also able to spot places where
reductions might be made. For example, they observed that manufacturing
facilities tend to throw out unused material. Instead, Kirchain and his
colleagues suggest recycling these scraps, as well as combining certain
parts of the shoe to eliminate cutting and welding steps. Printing
certain features onto a shoe, instead of affixing them as separate
fabrics, would also streamline the assembly process.
Kirchain and Olivetti view their results as a guide for companies looking to evaluate the impact of similar products.
“When
people are trying for streamlined approaches to [lifecycle
assessments], often they put emphasis on the materials impact, which
makes a lot of sense,” Olivetti says. “But we tried to identify a set of
characteristics that would point you to making sure you were also
looking at the manufacturing side — when it matters.”
Written by: Jennifer Chu, MIT News Office
Source MIT media relations
contact: Sarah McDonnell, MIT News Office / email: s_mcd@mit.edu phone: 617-253-8923
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