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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

[en] CHALLENGES FOR APPLYING THE CRADLE-TO-CRADLE METHODOLOGY TO THE LIFE CYCLE OF MDF AND MDP FURNITURE / [pt] DESAFIOS PARA APLICAÇÃO DA METODOLOGIA DO BERÇO-AO-BERÇO AO CICLO DE VIDA DE MÓVEIS DE MDF E MDP

GIL MACHADO GUIGON DE ARAUJO 20 September 2018 (has links)
[pt] A crescente percepção da importância da proteção ambiental e dos impactos associados aos bens de consumo tem aumentado o interesse no desenvolvimento de métodos para melhor compreender e lidar com estes impactos. Neste contexto, a metodologia berço-ao-berço (C2C) descreve uma maneira de projetar produtos com ciclos de vida (biológicos ou técnicos) fechados, para evitar a perda de nutrientes do solo e de matéria-prima não renovável. Na indústria de mobiliário, a madeira tem sido cada vez mais substituída por painéis industrializados (MDF e MDP), que oferecem maior produtividade, matéria prima renovável e um posicionamento sustentável de mercado. A maneira como são descartados hoje, no entanto, não está alinhada com esse discurso. A partir de revisão bibliográfica, visitas e entrevistas, o ciclo de vida do móvel de MDF e MDP foi descrito para que, posteriormente pudessem ser avaliadas as possibilidades de adequação à metodologia C2C. Ao final do trabalho, concluiu-se que por ser um material que pode ser adequado ao ciclo biológico ou ao ciclo técnico, seu potencial para o fechamento do ciclo é grande, no entanto devem ser superadas barreiras como a utilização de componentes nocivos à saúde em sua composição e o descarte fragmentado dos móveis. / [en] The perception that human activities might have significant impact in the environment led, in the last decades, to the development of policies and methodologies to better understand and handle the subject. The United Nations Conference on Environment and Development (UNCED), also known as the Rio Summit or ECO-92, was a major event in that direction. More than one hundred heads of state gathered with other representatives from the society, industries and environmentalists to discuss about sustainable development and global warming (MCDONOUGH and BRAUNGART, 2002). One of the negotiation s result was the definition of the eco-eficiency strategy, that guided the industry approach to the issue in the two past decades. Reducing direct and indirect environmental impact in every possible opportunity became one of the main strategies to reach such eco-eficiency. To identify these possibilities, the product s life cycle became focus of studies from researchers, companies and governments. The Law no. 12.305/2010, for example, defines life cycle as the series of stages related to de development of the product, the acquisition of raw material, the production process, consumption and final disposal. In a similar way, the International Standards Organization (ISO) defines life cycle as consecutive and interlinked stages of a product system, from raw material acquisition or generation from natural resources to final disposal. 14000 series os norms, from ISO, is one of the main tools to provide inputs to this debate. More specific, 14020 and 14040 regulate environmental labels and life cycle assessment (LCA). While labels are essential to communicate to the market the characteristics of a product, LCA is one of the most complete tool to help decisions related to the development of products or services. It can be applied to the whole life cycle, from raw material extraction to disposal, or in specific stages, and allows for a comparison between two different solutions based in the same functional unit, or objective, making it easier to identify the least negative impact. Cradle-to-cradle methodology (C2C) developed by MCDONOUGH and BRAUNGART (2002) takes a step further in the approach of the environmental impact reduction, suggesting that instead of reducing the negative impact, products and services should have a positive impact in the environment.

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