August 26, 2014

This article has been reviewed according to Science X's editorial process and policies. Editors have highlighted the following attributes while ensuring the content's credibility:

Yale journal explores advances in sustainable manufacturing

Credit: © Pavel L Photo and Video
× close
Credit: © Pavel L Photo and Video

In recent years, increasing pressure from policymakers, consumers, and suppliers has prompted manufacturers to set environmental targets that go beyond reducing the pollutants they emit from their smokestacks or discharge into rivers and lakes. Today companies must also assess environmental performance at every step in their process, from the mining of primary materials to the use and recycling of their products.

This perspective has given rise to the discipline known as life cycle engineering, which connects the engineers who grapple with the efficiencies of production processes, machine design, and process chains with the industrial ecologists who develop more over-arching methods of .

In a special issue of the Journal of Industrial Ecology (JIE), "Sustainability in Manufacturing: The Role of Life Cycle Engineering," experts from a range of disciplines—including industrial ecologists, manufacturing and design engineers, and production and operations researchers—explore the latest research on sustainable manufacturing and how life cycle engineering is being used to reduce .

"At the heart of is an imperative to move beyond the make-now-clean-it-up-later approach that has characterized so much of our industrial society," said Reid Lifset, editor-in-chief of JIE. "Manufacturing is a point of leverage—better design and operations can have ramifications across the entire product life cycle. This is where industrial ecology meets life cycle engineering."

Some highlights from the issue include:

"As this special issue of the Journal of Industrial Ecology shows, advances in engineering hold great promise for a more sustainable manufacturing sector," said Peter Crane, Dean of the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies (F&ES). "From innovations in the process itself, to designs that change the way consumers use products, the potential for improved environmental performance is profound."

More information: Journal of Industrial Ecology , onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10 … .18.issue-4/issuetoc

Provided by Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies

Load comments (0)