Results of the first adapted design for sustainability project in a South Pacific small island developing state: Fiji

With high population densities concentrated in predominately coastal zones, the South Pacific will, in this century, be heavily impacted by global temperature and sea level rises. Small island developing states do have a number of unique problems, namely, small scale economic development together wi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of cleaner production 2010-12, Vol.18 (18), p.1775-1786
Hauptverfasser: Lobendahn Wood, Michael D.K., Mathieux, Fabrice, Brissaud, Daniel, Evrard, Damien
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container_issue 18
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container_title Journal of cleaner production
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creator Lobendahn Wood, Michael D.K.
Mathieux, Fabrice
Brissaud, Daniel
Evrard, Damien
description With high population densities concentrated in predominately coastal zones, the South Pacific will, in this century, be heavily impacted by global temperature and sea level rises. Small island developing states do have a number of unique problems, namely, small scale economic development together with environmental sustainability. This paper presents the lessons learnt from the implementation of the first cleaner production and design initiative project conducted in a Pacific small island developing state(s) (SIDS) using the design for sustainability (D4S) methodology. The final product was analysed using the life cycle assessment (LCA) method. Implemented within a medium-sized enterprise operating in Fiji, the Cook Islands, and Samoa, the project focused on improving an existing product and its associated life cycle to make it more environmentally friendly to manufacture, retail, and dispose of. The project outcomes revealed that D4S provides a suitable tool for a country like Fiji to pursue more intensively an eco-friendly manufacturing agenda. However, when combined with LCA, the qualitative nature of D4S shows that not all solutions produce the best overall result. Specifically, the “improved” design, whilst being less impactful on Fiji in terms of disposal, has a higher impact globally due to the production and manufacture of the new materials used. For this reason designers need to address the impact criteria and decide whether a domestic or international agenda is of greater concern within the SIDS context.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.jclepro.2010.07.027
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Cleaning
D4S
Design for sustainability
Domestic
Ecodesign
Islands
Life cycle analysis
Life cycle assessment
Life cycle engineering
Population density
SIDS
Small island developing states
Sustainability
title Results of the first adapted design for sustainability project in a South Pacific small island developing state: Fiji
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