final programme
www.isie2009.com
Index Welcome to Lisboa
Index
2
3
Schedule at a glance
4
Welcome messages
5
Committees
6
Keynote Speaker Information
8
Scientific Programme
10
Scientific Programme – Parallel Sessions
19
Posters
24
Conference Venue Important Conference Information
25
Social Programme Accompanying Person Programme
26
About Lisboa
27
Lisboa General Information
28
Local Transportation Information
29
Lisboa Underground System (METRO)
30
AMB3E
31
Sponsors
Schedule at a glance
21 JUNE Sunday
22 JUNE Monday
23 JUNE Tuesday
24 JUNE
Wednesday
Parallel Sessions 8:30 Registration 10:00
Plenary Session
9:00 Keynote Speaker 10:00 Jan Rotmans
PS7.I - Auditorium 2
9:00 PS7.II - Auditorium 3 10:40
PS7.III - Room 1 PS7.IV - Room 2
Auditorium 2
Plenary Session
9:00 Keynote Speaker 10:00 John Ehrenfeld Auditorium 2
Parallel Sessions OPENING
10:00 10:20 CEREMONY Auditorium 2
PS3.I - Auditorium 2
10:00 PS3.II - Auditorium 3 11:20
PS3.III - Room 1 PS3.IV - Room 2
Parallel Sessions 10:40 Refreshment Break 11:00
10:00 PS10.I - Auditorium 2 11:00 PS10.II - Auditorium 3
PS10.III - Room 1 PS10.IV - Room 2 Parallel Sessions
10:20 MFA Section 10:30 Con Account
11:20 11:40
Refreshment Break
11:00 PS8.I - Auditorium 2 12:00 PS8.II - Auditorium 3
11:00 Refreshment Break 11:30
PS8.III - Room 1 PS8.IV - Room 2 Parallel Sessions Plenary Session 10:30 Keynote Speaker 11:30 Leith Sharp
11:40 PS4.I - Auditorium 2 13:00 PS4.II - Auditorium 3
PS4.III - Room 1 PS4.IV - Room 2
Auditorium 2
Parallel Sessions Plenary Session 12:00 Keynote Speaker 13:00 Robert Socolow
11:30 PS11.I - Auditorium 2 12:50 PS11.II - Auditorium 3
13:00 14:30
12:50 14:00
PS11.III - Room 1 PS11.IV - Room 2
Auditorium 2
Parallel Sessions 11:30 PS1.I - Auditorium 2 13:10 PS1.II - Auditorium 3
PS1.III - Room 1 PS1.IV - Room 2 13:10 14:40
Lunch Parallel Sessions PS2.I - Auditorium 2
14:40 PS2.II - Auditorium 3 16:00
PS2.III - Room 1 PS2.IV - Room 2
16:00 Poster Session I & 18:00 Refreshments
13:00 14:30
Lunch Parallel Sessions PS5.I - Auditorium 2
14:30 16:10 PS5.II - Auditorium 3
PS5.III - Room 1 PS5.IV - Room 2
16:10 Refreshment Break 16:40
Lunch
Lunch
Parallel Sessions Parallel Sessions PS9.I - Auditorium 2 14:30 PS9.II - Auditorium 3 15:50 PS9.III - Room 1 PS9.IV - Room 2
14:00 PS12.I - Auditorium 2 15:00 PS12.II - Auditorium 3
15:50 Poster Session II & 18:00 Refreshments
15:00 Award Ceremony & 15:30 Final Discussion
PS12.III - Room 1 PS12.IV - Room 2
Parallel Sessions PS6.I - Auditorium 2
15:30 CLOSING CEREMONY 16:00 Auditorium 2
16:40 18:00 PS6.II - Auditorium 3
PS6.III - Room 1 PS6.IV - Room 2
19:00 Typical Dinner 22:00 Pรกteo Alfacinha
19:00 Dinner 22:00 Convento de Mafra
19:00 Closing Dinner 22:00 Palรกcio Foz
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Welcome Messages
Dear Friends and Colleagues, It is my great pleasure to welcome you to the 5th International Conference of the International Society for Industrial Ecology, ISIE and to Lisbon, Portugal. For me, it is a very special honor to host this magnificent event in Portugal. The ISIE conference is the place to be in terms of innovative research in the field of industrial ecology. The organizing Committee has been able to put together a strong Scientific Program for you, as a variety of great papers were submitted by our vigorous scientific community. We are also proud of our 4 excellent key-note speakers: Leith Sharp from Harvard University, USA, Jan Rotmans from Erasmus University 4 Rotterdam, in the Netherlands, Robert Socolow from Princeton University, USA, and John Ehrenfeld, from Yale, USA, and the Executive Director of ISIE. I would like to thank the Technical Committee for undertaking the difficult job of carefully evaluating the large number of submitted abstracts, as well as to the good friends worldwide involved in the organization of this event. Finally, I would like to thank the following leading edge companies and organizations, whose generous
support contributed to the success of ISIE2009: Our Gold Sponsor AMB3E, Silver sponsor Sogilub, and REN, Valorpneu, FCT- Portuguese Science and Technology Foundation, the Lisbon City Hall and the MIT-Portugal program. In these tight economic times, their contribution to the ISIE2009 Conference is especially appreciated and demonstrates their commitment to the future of Industrial Ecology. Again, on behalf of the Organizing Committee I welcome you to Lisbon and to the ISIE 2009 Conference. I hope that you will find the meeting informative and enjoyable, and that you will take the opportunity to meet new friends and share golden moments with old friends. I hope that your contact with the Portuguese culture could be an enriching experience and that your participation in the ISIE conference may contribute for us to be able to design a better world! Paulo Ferrão
Dear Participant, Welcome to the 5th International Conference of the International Society for Industrial Ecology. The ISIE is relatively new, but it has already established itself as a “learned society” whose meetings, journal (the Journal of Industrial Ecology) and newsletter enable discussions between the different disciplines who contribute to the development of Industrial Ecology. Industrial Ecology is really a new paradigm – a new way of viewing, understanding and shaping the way humans organize themselves and their economy. Industrial ecology asks us to “understand how the industrial system works, how it is regulated, and its interaction with the biosphere; then, on the basis of what we know about ecosystems, to determine how it could be restructured to make it compatible with the way natural ecosystems function.”
If you are not already a member of ISIE, you might like to consider putting that right so that you can stay in contact with the people you meet here. The Organising Committee, chaired by Paulo Ferrão, have done an excellent job in putting this conference together. It is now up to the participants to ensure that the presentations and discussions are lively, and that they advance the understanding and application of Industrial Ecology. Enjoy the next few days! Roland Clift CBE FREng, President of the International Society for Industrial Ecology
Committees
Organising Committee
Hiroki Hondo, Yokohama National University (Japan)
Arnold Tukker (TNO) (Netherlands)
Satish V. Joshi, Michigan State University (USA)
Reinout Heijungs (CML) (Netherlands)
Yasushi Kondo, Waseda University (Japan)
Gjalt Huppes (CML) (Netherlands)
Barbara Reck, Yale University Co-chair (USA)
Daniel Lang, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (Switzerland)
ISIE Governing Council
Claudia R. Binder, University of Zürich - Co-chair (Switzerland)
Manfred Lenzen, The University of Sydney (Australia)
Technical Committee
Scott Matthews, Carnegie Mellon University (USA)
Paulo Ferrão, Instituto Superior Técnico - Co-chair (Portugal) John Ehrenfeld, Executive Director ISIE (USA) Shinichiro Nakamura, Waseda University - Co-chair (Japan)
Lauren Basson, University of Surrey (United Kingdom) Stefan Bringezu, Wuppertal Institute (Germany) Ichiro Daigo, The University of Tokyo (Japan) Brynhildur Davidsdottir, University of Iceland (Iceland) Gerard Dijkema, Delft University of Technology (Netherlands) Nina Eisenmenger, IFF (Austria) John Fernandez, MIT (USA) Fausto Freire, Coimbra University (Portugal) Michael Gerst, Dartmouth University (USA) Roland Geyer, University of California, Bren School, Santa Barbara (USA) Seiji Hashimoto, National Institute for Environmental Studies (NIES) (Japan) Troy Hawkins, Norwegian University of Science & Technology (Norway)
Daniel Müller, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (Norway) Samuel Niza, Instituto Superior Técnico (Portugal) Heinz Schandl, CSIRO Sustainable Ecosystems (Australia) Anders H. Stromman, Norwegian University of Science & Technology (Norway) Sangwon Suh, University of Minnesota (USA) Abhishek Agarwal, The Robert Gordon University (United Kingdom) Gijsbert Korevaar , TU Delft (Netherlands) Shelie Miller, Clemson University (USA) Eric Williams, Arizona State University (USA) Xu Ming, Arizona State University (USA) Kristan Cockerill, University College (USA)
Roland Clift, University of Surrey (United Kingdom), President Gregory Keoleian, University of Michigan (USA), President-Elected Marina Fischer-Kowalski, Vienna University (Austria), Immediate Past President Chris Kennedy, University of Toronto (Canada),Treasurer Kristan Cockerill, Appalachian State Univeristy (USA), Secretary Reid Lifset, JIE Editor, (USA) Marian Chertow, Yale University (USA) Seiji Hashimoto, National Institute for Environmental Studies (Japan) Sangwon Suh, University of Minnesota (USA) Thomas Theis, University of Illinois (USA) Gemma Cervantes, National Technical Institute (Mexico) Amy Landis, University of Pittsburgh (USA) Student Liaison Wenjie Liao, Leiden University (Netherlands)
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Keynote Speaker Information Leith Sharp Harvard University, USA Leith Sharp has a bachelor of engineering (environmental) from UNSW, Australia and a Master of Education (human development & psychology) from Harvard University. She has 18 years of experience in greening universities, beginning her career as an elected student union environment officer before being employed to create the University of New South Wales Environmental Management Program in 1995. In 1999 Harvard recruited Leith to become the founding director of Harvard’s Green Campus Initiative. Over the next 9 years Leith worked to build the largest green campus organization in the world funding this effort largely on the savings it produced, employing over 23 full time professional staff and 30 part time students, bringing Harvard to the forefront as a global leader in campus sustainability. Specific achievements include over 50+ LEED building projects (mostly Gold or better), a $12 million revolving loan fund achieving an ROI of 30%+, wide scale engagement in occupant behavioral change, onsite renewable energy, a significant GHG reduction commitment, alternative fuels for vehicles, green cleaning, environmental purchasing and much more. 6
Leith instructs two courses offered through the Harvard Extension School, Organizational Change Management for Sustainability and Sustainable Buildings: Design, Construction and Operations, and has consulted and presented to over 100 organizations. Leith sits on the governing committees and editorial boards of numerous organizations dedicated to greening higher education including AASHE and the International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education. Leith has received numerous awards for her work including a Churchill Fellowship and Young Australian of the Year, NSW Environment Category. Leith recently left her position at Harvard to engage in a range of writing, teaching and consulting activities and can be contacted via lsharp@hsph.harvard.edu or leithsharp@yahoo.co.uk ‘As we have been working to drive our colleges and universities towards campus sustainability, we have been discovering that our greatest opportunities for achieving the depth, breath and pace of change can only be realized by using a systems thinking approach that addresses life cycle costs and impacts. We have started to reveal not only the environmental imperative for adopting systems thinking, but also the financial and political imperatives for doing so. It is now only a matter of time before we begin to see our colleges and universities transforming themselves into systems thinking institutions.’ Leith Sharp
Jan Rotmans Scientific Director Dutch Research Institute for Transitions / Erasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands Jan Rotmans is the scientific director of DRIFT. In September 2004 he established the new research institute DRIFT: Dutch Research Institute For Transitions and received a position as full professor in transitions and transition management at the Erasmus University Rotterdam. Jan Rotmans is one of the founding fathers of Integrated Assessment and an expert in the field of integrated modelling, scenario-analysis, indicator-development and uncertainty-analysis and –management. He created the IMAGE and TARGETS Integrated Assessment Models. In the nineties, he was involved in quite a few innovative activities in the fields of climate change & global change research, integrated assessment modelling and sustainable development research (sustainability science). In the field of scenario-development, he directed the European VISIONS-project for the European Commission, DG-XII. The last few years, he has focused his research on the further development of the concepts of transitions and transition management. He is scientific director of the Dutch Network on System Innovations: Transitions to a Sustainable Society (KSI), which in 2004 received a grant from Dutch government of 10 Million Euros. He also leads the big European MATISSE-project of 7 Million Euro that deals with the development of new tools and methods for assessing sustainability in Europe. From 1998 till 2004 he was director of ICIS: International Centre for Integrative Studies, at Maastricht University, that he founded in 1998. From 1992-1997 he was part-time professor Integrated Assessment at the University Maastricht. From 1995-1997 he worked as scientific advisor for the Commission on Sustainable Development (CSD) within the Division of Sustainable Development. Before that, he worked for ten years at RIVM (National Institute for Public Health and Environment). He was initiator of the scientific journal ‘Environmental Modelling and Assessment’, and he is initiator and editor-in-chief of the international scientific journal ‘Integrated Assessment’ and editor of several scientific journals. He is initiator of the Global Modelling Forum for Sustainable Development, vice-chairman of the European Forum on Integrated Environmental Assessment (EFIEA), and vice-president of TIAS: The Integrated Assessment Society. From 1994-2000 he was vice-chairman of the PIK-Institute in Potsdam, and from 2004 he is a member of the Supervisory Board of the Tyndall Institute in Norwich, UK. Jan Rotmans has more than 200 publications in the field of climate change & global change modelling, sustainable development, and transitions and system innovations. He has given numerous keynote lectures all over the world and attended numerous conferences
Keynote Speaker Information and workshops. For his PhD-research he received the SNS-prize, and in 2003 he received the IIAS-Award, on behalf of the International Institute for Advanced Studies in Systems Research and Cybernetics. Jans Rotmans Robert Socolow Princeton University, USA Robert Socolow is a Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering at Princeton University. Socolow’s current research focuses on the characteristics of a global energy system responsive to global and local environmental and security constraints. His specific areas of interest include carbon dioxide capture from fossil fuels and storage in geological formations, nuclear power, energy efficiency in buildings, and the acceleration of deployment of advanced technologies in developing countries. He is the co-principal investigator (with ecologist, Stephen Pacala) of Princeton University’s Carbon Mitigation Initiative (CMI) www.princeton.edu/~cmi/, a fifteen-year (2001-2015) project, supported by BP and Ford. Pacala and Socolow are the authors of “Stabilization wedges: Solving the climate problem for the next 50 years with current technologies,” which appeared in the August 13, 2004 issue of Science. Socolow is a member of two current committees of the National Academies: The Committee on America’s Energy Future and the Committee on America’s Climate Choices. He was a member of the Grand Challenges for Engineering Committee of the National Academy of Engineering. He was the editor of Annual Review of Energy and the Environment, 1992-2002. In July 1997 he co-chaired the Workshop on Fuels Decarbonization and Carbon Sequestration, sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy. In 1995, he was a member of the Fusion Review Panel of the President’s Committee of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST). In the l970s and 80s, he directed a team of physical scientists, engineers, architects, statisticians, and behavioral scientists in a series of unique research projects on energy conservation in housing. With John Harte, Socolow co-edited Patient Earth (Holt, Rinehart, l97l), one of the first college textbooks in environmental studies. Socolow has a B.A. (summa cum laude) and a Ph.D. in theoretical high energy physics in l964 from Harvard University. He was an assistant professor of physics at Yale University from l966 to l97l. He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He was awarded the 2003 Leo Szilard Lectureship Award by the American Physical Society: “For leadership in establishing energy and environmental problems as legitimate research fields for physicists, and for demonstrating that these broadly defined problems can be addressed with the highest scientific standards.”
“The industrial ecology research community should consider itself part-owner of carbon management for climate change mitigation. Life-cycle analysis leads to a focus on flows of carbon from below ground in fossil fuel extraction, the transformation of reduced carbon to oxidized carbon during energy extraction, and carbon “disposal” in the atmosphere or elsewhere. Flows of carbon among reservoirs in the atmosphere, on land, and in the ocean interact with these anthropogenic flows. Conceivably, commercially viable technology for carbon extraction from the atmosphere will emerge, if carbon flows into and out of the atmosphere command a high price.” Robert Socolow John Ehrenfeld Executive Director International Society for Industrial Ecology Dr. Ehrenfeld is currently Executive Director of the International Society for Industrial Ecology. His research focus is sustainability and culture change. He is the author of Sustainability by Design: A Subversive Strategy for Transforming our Consumer Culture. He currently serves on the Council of the Society for Organizational Learning. He retired in 2000 as the Director of the 7 MIT Program on Technology, Business, and Environment. In October 1999, the World Resources Institute honored him with a lifetime achievement award. He received the Founders Award for Distinguished Service from the Academy of Management’s Organization and Natural Environment Division in August 2000. He holds a B. S. and Sc. D. in Chemical Engineering from MIT, and is author or co-author of over 200 papers, and other publications. Industrial Ecology has an important role to play in society’s transition toward sustainability. The tools and concepts that have been created in the almost 20 years of the field’s existence enable the design of artifacts and institutions imposing significantly less impact on the environment than earlier forms. With sustainability overtaking traditional environmental concerns, industrial ecology, now embodying ideas from complexity theory, can continue to play a similar important role in this much larger and more challenging arena. John R. Ehrenfeld
Scientific Programme Sunday, 21 June
Monday, 22 June
8:30 – 10:00 Registration
9:00-10:00
10:00 – 10:20 Opening Ceremony -AUDITORIUM 2 10:20 – 10:30 MFA Section ConAccount 10:30-11:30 Plenary Session - AUDITORIUM 2
Keynote Speaker Leith Sharp, Harvard University, USA
11:30-13:10 Parallel Sessions
PS1.I Sustainable Resource Management – AUDITORIUM 2 PS1.II Industrial Ecology Tools for Sustainability – AUDITORIUM 3 PS1.III Sustainable Consumption – ROOM 1 PS1.IV Industrial Ecology in Developing Countries – ROOM 2
13:10-14:40 Lunch 14:40-16:00 Parallel Sessions
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PS2.I Sustainable Resource Man agement – AUDITORIUM 2 PS2.II Designing sustainable cities – the urban and the social metabolisms – AUDITORIUM 3 PS2.III Sustainable Consumption – ROOM 1 PS2.IV Industrial Symbiosis ROOM 2
16:00-18:00 Poster Session I & Refreshments 19:00-22:00 Typical Dinner - Páteo Alfacinha
Plenary Session - AUDITORIUM 2 Keynote Speaker Jan Rotmans, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Netherlands
10:00-11:20 Parallel Sessions
PS3.I Sustainable Resource Management – AUDITORIUM 2 PS3.II Designing sustainable cities – the urban and the social metabolisms – AUDITORIUM 3 PS3.III Managing end-of-life products – ROOM 1 PS3.IV Environmentally Extended Input Output Analysis – ROOM 2
11:20-11:40 Refreshment Break 11:40-13:00 Parallel Sessions
PS4.I Sustainable Resource Management – AUDITORIUM 2 PS4.II Sustainable Consumption – AUDITORIUM 3 PS4.III Designing sustainable cities – the urban and the social metabolisms – ROOM 1 PS4.IV Environmentally Extended Input Output Analysis – ROOM 2
13:00-14:30 Lunch 14:30-16:10 Parallel Sessions
PS5.I Sustainable Resource Management – AUDITORIUM 2 PS5.II Industrial Symbiosis – AUDITORIUM 3 PS5.III Industrial Ecology in developing countries – ROOM 1 PS5.IV Environmentally Extended Input Output Analysis – ROOM 2
16:10-16:40 Refreshment Break 16:40-18:00 Parallel Sessions
PS6.I Special Session UNEP – AUDITORIUM 2 PS6.II Special Session EIP in Asia – AUDITORIUM 3 PS6.III Eco-design: products and services of the future – ROOM 1 PS6.IV Environmentally Extended Input Output Analysis – ROOM 2
19:00-22:00 Dinner - Convento de Mafra
Scientific Programme Tuesday, 23 June
9:00-10:40
Parallel Sessions
PS7.I Industrial Ecology tools for sustainability – AUDITORIUM 2 PS7.II Sustainable Resource Management – AUDITORIUM 3 PS7.III Designing sustainable Cities – the urban and the social metabolisms – ROOM 1 PS7.IV Managing end-of-life products – ROOM 2
10:40-11:00 Refreshment Break 11:00-12:00 Parallel Sessions
PS8.I Visions on new IE-based paradigms towards sustainability – AUDITORIUM 2 PS8.II Sustainable Resource Management – AUDITORIUM 3 PS8.III Industrial Symbiosis – ROOM 1 PS8.IV Industrial Ecology in developing countries – ROOM 2
12:00-13:00 Plenary Session – AUDITORIUM 2
Keynote Speaker Robert Socolow, Princeton University, USA
13:00-14:30 Lunch
Wednesday, 24 June
9:00-10:00
Plenary Session – AUDITORIUM 2 Keynote Speaker John Ehrenfeld, International Society for Industrial Ecology
10:00-11:00 Parallel Sessions
PS10.I Sustainable Resource Managemen – AUDITORIUM 2 PS10.II Sustainable Consumption – AUDITORIUM 3 PS10.III Managing end-of-life products – ROOM 1 PS10.IV Industrial Ecology tools for sustainability – ROOM 2
11:00-11:30 Refreshment Break 11:30-12:50 Parallel Sessions
PS11.I Industrial Ecology tools for sustainability – AUDITORIUM 2 PS11.II Eco-design: products and services of the future – AUDITORIUM 3 PS11.III Sustainable Resource Management – ROOM 1 PS11.IV Sustainable Consumption – ROOM 2
12:50-14:00 Lunch
14:30-15:50 Parallel Sessions
14:00-15:00 Parallel Sessions
PS9.I Designing sustainable cities – the urban and the social metabolisms – AUDITORIUM 2 PS9.II Industrial Ecology tools for sustainability – AUDITORIUM 3 PS9.III Visions on new IE-based paradigms towards sustainability – ROOM 1 PS9.IV Sustainable Resource Management – ROOM 2
15:50-18:00 Poster Session II & Refreshments 19:00-22:00 Closing Dinner - Palácio Foz
PS12.I Sustainable Consumption – AUDITORIUM 2 PS12.II Sustainable Resource Management – AUDITORIUM 3 PS12.III Visions on new IE-based paradigms towards sustainability – ROOM 1 PS12.IV Industrial Symbiosis – ROOM 2
15:00-15:30 Award Ceremony & Final Discussion – AUDITORIUM 2 15:30-16:00 Closing Ceremony
– AUDITORIUM 2
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Scientific Programme PARALLEL SESSIONS Sunday, 21 June 11:30-13:10
Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) Policy in East Asia in consideration of International Resource Circulation Yasuhiko Hotta, Shiko Hayashi, Chika Aoki, Magnus Bengtsson
Parallel Sessions
PS1.I Sustainable Resource Management – AUDITORIUM 2
Lifestyles Consumption and Resource Use in Australia Heinz Schandl
Global mapping of in-use stocks of Fe Al Zn and Cu Jason Rauch
Material intensity of household products and leisure activities – how to achieve dematerialisation? Michael Lettenmeier, Sini Veuro, Satu Lähteenoja
Preliminary Global Cycle of Neodymium Tianming Chen, Thomas Graedel Applying the sustainability potential analysis framework on scarce metals supply systems and identifying implications for sustainable scarce metals supply management Patrick A. Wäger, Daniel J. Lang
Intensity of resource consumption at district level Joana Abreu, Daniel Wiesmann, John E. Fernandez, Nuno Clímaco, Tiago Domingos Global patterns of material use: The impact of economic development population and technology on cross country differences of material consumption Steinberger Julia, Krausmann Fridolin
Dynamics of the interrelationship between material cycles: the case of nickel and stainless steel in 2000 and 2005 Barbara K. Reck, T.E. Graedel Closing the loop: implications of multigeneration extension to secondary batch planning decisions in aluminum production Gabrielle Gaustad, Elsa Olivetti, Randolph Kirchain
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PS1.IV Industrial Ecology in Developing Countries – ROOM 2 Development of circular economy in heavy pollution Industry Park— a case study in China Huiquan Li, Hui Zhang,Weijun Bao, Haitao Liu, Yi Zhang
PS1.II Industrial Ecology Tools for Sustainability – AUDITORIUM 3 Selecting Industrial Ecology tools: strengths and weaknesses for use in a decision support tool Belmira Neto, Carolien Kroeze, Leen Hordijk, Carlos Costa
Transferring Japanese Urban Symbiosis Model to China Xudong Chen, Tsuyoshi Fujita, Yong Geng, Shizuka Hashimoto Establishment and evolution of a facilitated IS programme in Toluca-Lerma Mexico Marina Bergua, D. Rachel Lombardi, Gabriela Rodriguez, Carlos Benitez de la Garza, Adrian Murphy
A Comprehensive Approach towards MFA and LCA Laura Schneider, Kathy Reimann, Matthias Finkbeiner The CALCAS scientific framework for New LCA Reinout Heijungs, Jeroen Guineé, Gjalt Huppes
Industrial Ecology in India – Past present and future Megha Shenoy, Marian Chertow
Integrated models versus the sequential application of individual models: an illustrative example Fausto Freire, Paulo Ferrão, Sten Thore
Material Flow Analysis and Strategic Environmental Assessment (SEA) toward a Public Policy Ecodesign Marcio Gama, Armando Caldeira-Pires
Exergetic Evaluation of Sugar Cane Sub-Products as Fuels in Brazilians Cogeneration Systems Djolse Nascimento Dantas, Aldo Roberto Ometto, Frederico Fábio Mauad PS1.III Sustainable Consumption – ROOM 1
14:40-16:00
Parallel Sessions
PS2.I Sustainable Resource Management – AUDITORIUM 2 Implications of ethanol and climate change on future water environment Yi-Wen Chiu
Scientific Programme PARALLEL SESSIONS Food feed fuel fibre or nature? Towards sustainable land use – a life cycle multicriteria approach M. Brandão, R. Clift, L. Milà i Canals, L. Basson
PS2.IV Industrial Symbiosis – ROOM 2 Complex patterns in industrial ecosystems Shi Lei, Shi Haijia Life and death in industrial ecosystems Weslynne Ashton, Marian Chertow
Ecological assessment of agricultural modernization with ecological footprint in Japan, Korea and China Tomoyo Toyota, Daisaku Goto, Shinji Kaneko
Cooperation in a proposed syngas industrial cluster Andreas Ligtvoet
Comparing the Life Cycles of Bioenergy Feedstocks to Choose the “Best” Biofuel Shelie Miller, Jim Chamberlain, Saumya Sarkar
Valuing Diversity in Industrial Ecosystems Randolph Kirchain, Frank Field
Monday, 22 June PS2.II Designing sustainable cities – the urban and the social metabolisms – AUDITORIUM 3
Urban Metabolic Profiles and Typologies Anke Schaffartzik, Julia K. Steinberger, Helga Weisz Urban MFA with sector and spatial resolution. The case of the Lisbon’s Metropolitan Area Leonardo Rosado, Samuel Niza, Paulo Ferrão, John Fernandez Developing Industrial Ecology tools for the measurement of urban metabolism: a case study Maria Christina Fragkou, Xavier Gabarrell, Teresa Vicent Combining Material Flow Analysis and System Dynamics David Quinn, Artessa Niccola Saldivar-Sali PS2.III Sustainable Consumption – ROOM 1 Understanding the Meaning Behind Sustainable Household Consumption Patterns in Metro Manila by Bridging the Gap Between Social and Environmental Science Marlyne Sahakian, Dr. Anthony SF Chiu The bare necessities: how much household carbon do we really need? Angela Druckman, Tim Jackson How can the consumers’ action space be enlarged towards sustainable consumption Satu Lähteenoja, Elli Kotakorpi, Michael Lettenmeier, Burcu Tunçer How to deal with the rebound effect? A conceptual model for a household environmental management system Pedro Baptista, Nuno Videira
10:00-11:20
Parallel Sessions
PS3.I Sustainable Resource Management – AUDITORIUM 2 Determining the best options for improving global energy efficiency Jonathan M. Cullen, Julian M. Allwood Impacts of PHEV and Renewable Energy Technologies on Marginal Displacement of GHG Emissions Jarod C. Kelly, Gregory A. Keoleian Energy and Civilization: A history of energy production and consumption in a global cultural technological and economic context Carolyn Mattick, Eric Williams, Braden Allenby The metabolic scale of the world economy in the past century – dynamics drivers impacts Marina Fischer-Kowalski, Fridolin Krausmann, Julia Steinberger, Nina Eisenmenger PS3.II Designing sustainable cities – the urban and the social metabolisms – AUDITORIUM 3 Unified methodology for evaluating sustainable consumption options in an urban metabolism context Paulo Ferrão, Leonardo Rosado, John Fernandez Evaluating the sustainability of urban development projects: the case of Lisbon municipality Samuel Niza, Paulo Ferrão Integrated agent-based decision-making modelling and spatially explicit material flow simulation: The Swiss recycling construction material market Christof Knöri, Claudia Binder, Hans-Jörg Althaus
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Scientific Programme PARALLEL SESSIONS Sustainable public spaces – a framework for planning, design and management Paula Antunes, Carlos Ribas, Rui Santos PS3.III Managing end-of-life products – ROOM 1 A knowledge-based transition of managing end-of-life products towards a recycling society Henning Wilts
PS4.II Sustainable Consumption – AUDITORIUM 3 Green procurement of construction materials and products: from Life Cycle Thinking to environmental procurement criteria definition Mario Tarantini, Arianna Dominici
Is Economic Value an Effective Proxy for Embodied Energy and Environmental Impact in Material Systems? Jeremy Gregory, Susan Fredholm, Randolph Kirchain
Evaluation of Environmental Impact of Different Consumption Patterns based on Input-output LCA and Uncertainty Analysis Hwong-wen Ma, Ming-Lung Hung, ChiaWei Chao
Product End-of-Life Management Networks Vered Doctori Blass, Roland Geyer
Developing local Carbon Footprint based indicators using Input-Output Analysis Hogne Nersund Larsen
The EU Integrated Project (IP) EXIOPOL Arnold Tukker Creating a global environmental database for input-output applications Stephan Moll, José Acosta, Stefan Giljum, Stephan Lutter A Consistent Set of EnvironmentallyExtended Supply and Use Tables bridging Monetary Transactions and Material Flows: Experiences and Opportunities of the EXIOPOL Database Troy R. Hawkins, Evgueni Poliakov An automated data handling protocol for environmentally extended inputoutputmodels Richard Wood, Manfred Lenzen 11:40-13:00
Understanding Linkages Among Resources E. van der Voet, T.E. Graedel
Analysis of the Fate of Aluminium Coming from End-of-life Commercial Vehicles in Europe: a Material Flow Analysis Approach Fabrice Mathieux
PS3.IV Environmentally Extended Input Output Analysis – ROOM 2
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Billions and Billions: Reusing NonHazardous Industrial Waste Marian Chertow, Carlos Camara Ortiz, Tara Parthasarathy
Parallel Sessions
PS4.I Sustainable Resource Management – AUDITORIUM 2 Advisement and results related to the range of coverage and the substitution of selected metals Dominic Wittmer How uncertainty issues affect life cycle GHG emissions and energy efficiency of biodiesel João Malca, Fausto Freire
The Economic and Environmental Implications of Technological Transitions: Moving towards a low carbon society in Iceland Brynhildur Davidsdottir, Maria Maack, Elisabeth Unger PS4.III Designing sustainable cities – the urban and the social metabolisms – ROOM 1 Partners in Project Green – Canada’s largest employment area goes EcoIndustrial Tracy Casavant, Jenny Rustemeyer, Emilie Ouellet, Wendy LeBreton Evolution of regional industrial metabolism: a case study in Suzhou of China Mo Hongpin, Wen Zongguo, Chen Jining Analysis of the relationship of industrial structure change and environmental impact in Kawasaki city Japan Sun Ying, Fujita Tsuyoshi, Hashimoto Shizuka Urban Carbon Sinks - Potential in the Greater Toronto Area Eugene Mohareb, Adrian Mohareb, Christopher A Kennedy PS4.IV Environmentally Extended Input Output Analysis – ROOM 2 Ecological Footprint Applied to the Brazilian Economic Input Output Model Sergio Pacca, Joaquim José Martins Guilhoto
Scientific Programme PARALLEL SESSIONS Modeling the emissions of characteristic electricity consumption profiles of various customer groups in the EU Raquel Santos Jorge, Edgar Hertwich, Troy Hawkins Environmentally extended input-output tables (EE-IO) at the regional level – a case study for the Flemish region of Belgium An Vercalsteren, Theo Geerken, Peter Vercaemst The Ecological Footprint as a Sustainable Development Indicator: Critical Review and Connection with the System of Integrated Environmental and Economic Accounting Stéphanie Uhde 14:30-16:10
Parallel Sessions
PS5.I Sustainable Resource Management – AUDITORIUM 2 Manufacturing Energy Consumption for Solid State Lighting Systems H. Scott Matthews, Deanna Matthews, Paulina Jaramillo, Christopher Weber Urbanization in China and its implication for iron and steel industry Mingming Hu, Stefan Pauliuk, Tao Wang, Daniel B. Mueller, Gjalt Huppes, Ester van der Voet Measuring resource productivities of motor vehicle and liquid crystal display industries in South Korea Sangwon Suh, Yunhwa Chung, Kelsey Jaeger, Brian Remackel, Sang-Jun An National Environmental Indicators for the Mining Sector of Slovenia Slavko _olar, Ana Burger, Deborah J. Shields Supply chain carbon footprint model for forest industry in New Zealand Barbara Nebel, David Drysdale, Julie Sandilands, Ian Nicholas
Detecting industrial symbiosis using a GIS based tool Guillaume Massard, Albin Viquerat, Suren Erkman Policy and legislative framework on waste management in the European Union: a key issue of industrial symbiosis Ines Costa, Guillaume Massard, Abhishek Agarwal PS5.III Industrial Ecology in developing countries – ROOM 1 Material and Energy Use in Brazil 1970 - 2005 Andreas Mayer Green Nemesis or Environmental Fiasco? The Antagonistic Coexistence of Two Biofuels Technologies in Brazil Roberto Guerrero Compeán Flows and Fates of Cadmium in the City of Cape Town Kyle Mason-Jones, Harro von Blottnitz Waste data collection in developing countries: Connecting the social and the material dimension Jakob Lederer Applying industrial ecology tools to demand-side water management in Bangalore India Matthew J Eckelman, Megha Shenoy, Ramesh Ramaswamy, Marian R Chertow PS5.IV Environmentally Extended Input Output Analysis – ROOM 2 Virtual Global Carbon Network Supporting Japan’s Economy: Application of Global Link Input-Output Model, Keisuke Nansai, Yasushi Kondo, Shigemi Kagawa, Sangwon Suh Embodied carbon emissions in a multiregional input-output model João Rodrigues, Tiago Domingos
PS5.II Industrial Symbiosis – AUDITORIUM 3 Iron and Steel Industrial Symbiosis System from Thermodynamic Perspective: A Case Study of Handan City China YU Bing, SHI Lei Zero Emission Park – developing industrial symbiosis towards sustainability: Theoretical framing upstream and conceptual specification downstream Ralf Isenmann, Michael von Hauff, Georg Müller-Christ Resource relevance of Eco-Industrial Networking in Germany Susanne Hartard
Global dimensions of sustainable growth in Europe Christian Lutz, Stefan Giljum Degrees of truncation: When are multilateral trade linkages significant in multiregional input-output analyses? Robbie Andrew, James Lennox, Glen Peters Assessing impacts with a local perspective: a combined global multi-regional IO model pollutant diffusion through air and food and environmental health impacts Damien Friot, Olivier Jolliet, Shanna Shaked
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Scientific Programme PARALLEL SESSIONS 16:40-18:00
Searching for the frontier of emission reduction: A linear programming model based on wastewater treatment IO model Chen LIN
Parallel Sessions
PS6.I Special Session UNEP – AUDITORIUM 2 Introductory Presentation: The role of the International Panel for Sustainable Resource Management Janet Salem, Bas de Leeuw, Romain Perez
Using Ghosh IO Models to Identify Carbon Risk Deanna Matthews, H. Scott Matthews A Waste Input-Output Framework with Cumulative Product Lifetime Distributions and Its Application Shigemi Kagawa, Keisuke Nansai, Yasushi Kondo, Tomohiro Tasaki
PS6.II Special Session EIP in Asia – AUDITORIUM 3 From industrial eco-innovation to circular economy: The application of industrial ecology in China Guiming Wang, Raymond Côté,Fengling Gao Eco-Industrial Networking for Sustainable Development in Asia – A Review of Issues and Development Strategies Sudhakar Yedla, Hung-Suck Park
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Tuesday, 23 June 9:00-10:40
Parallel Sessions
PS7.I Industrial Ecology tools for sustainability – AUDITORIUM 2
EIP Development Strategies in Korea Ban Yong Un , Jeong Hurnkun, Hwang Gyu Hwan
Analysing the Sustainability of WoodBased Bio-refinery and its Supply Chains Anthony Halog
Evaluation of symbiosis effects in ecoindustrial parks in Japan Tsuyoshi Fujita, Shizuka Hashimoto
Carbon Performance of US Electricity Producers under different US Carbon Market Scenarios, Timo Busch, Volker H Hoffmann
PS6.III Eco-design: products and services of the future – ROOM 1 The assessment of ecodesign application using the Analytic Hierarchy Process: a case study in three furniture companies. Miriam Borchardt, Giancarlo Medeiros Pereira, Miguel Afonso Sellitto Eco Design in Malaysian Industries: Challenges and Opportunities Zahari Taha, Novita Sakundarini, Raja Ariffin, Raja Ghazila, Julierose Gonzalez Strategic perspectives on ecodesign practice in small to medium sized manufacturers Simon O’Rafferty, Frank o’connor, Sohail Hajatdoost Green by design: Conceptualization of a smart materials database for designers Rita Margarido, Paula Antunes, António Câmara PS6.IV Environmentally Extended Input Output Analysis – ROOM 2 The Interregional Waste Transportation Model for the Compilation of Interregional Waste Input-output Table Makiko Tsukui
Materials Flow Analysis and Dynamic Life-cycle Assessment of Lightweight Automotive Materials in the U.S. Passenger Vehicle Fleet Lynette Cheah Life Cycle Greenhouse Gas Emissions Embodied in the Production Trade and Consumption of Primary Aluminum Ingot from 1990 – 2005 Colin A. McMillan, Gregory A. Keoleian A Platinum Market Model to Examine the Risk of Increased Scarcity for Downstream Firms Elisa Alonso, Frank Field, Rich Roth, Randolph Kirchain PS7.II Sustainable Resource Management – AUDITORIUM 3 Case Study: Multi Life Cycle Center Bernd Kopacek Evaluation method for Metal Resource Recyclability based on Thermodynamic Analysis Kenichi Nakajima, Osamu Takeda, Takahiro Miki, Kazuyo Matsubae-Yokoyama, Tetsuya Nagasaka
Scientific Programme PARALLEL SESSIONS Material Recyclability Evaluation of Urban Structures using Urban-ore TMR Eiji Yamasue, Ryota Minamino, Hiroki Tanikawa, Ichiro Daigo, Hideyuki Okumura, Keiichi N Ishihara Non-destructive recycling: a latent opportunity for meeting the 2050 carbon emissions targets in industry Julian M. Allwood, Jonathan M. Cullen, Rachel L. Milford Increasing use of secondary and renewable materials in production planning Elsa Olivetti, Gabrielle Gaustad, Frank Field, Randolph Kirchain PS7.III Designing sustainable Cities – the urban and the social metabolisms – ROOM 1 Greening roofs for sustainable development of compact tropical cities C.Y. Jim Expansion of infrastructure networks in growing cities and the future demand for material stocks Stefan Pauliuk, Venkatesh Govindarajan, Daniel B. Müller, Helge Brattebo Evaluating the usability of green buildings Clinton J Andrews Conservation of resources by reusing building components Wim Debacker, Anne Paduart Using Foundation Species to Enhance the Resilience of Urban Service Profiles E.M. Walsh PS7.IV Managing end-of-life products – ROOM 2 E-waste assessment in Minas Gerais/Brazil Martin Streicher-Porte
Importation and end-of-life processing of computers in developing countries: Peru’s case study Ramzy Kahhat, Eric Williams 11:00-12:00
Parallel Sessions
PS8.I Visions on new IE-based paradigms towards sustainability – AUDITORIUM 2 From Life Cycle Analysis (LCA) to Life Style Analysis (LSA) Timothy Gutowski A framework for sustainable development processes Philip Sinclair, Damiete Ogunkunle, Roland Clift Strategies and tools for refashioning the social metabolism: IE as a key to the transition to sustainability Edgar Hertwich, Marina FischerKowalski,Reid Lifset PS8.II Sustainable Resource Management – AUDITORIUM 3 Closing a loop: substance flow analysis of nitrogen and phosphorus in the Finnish coastal aquaculture Eero Asmala, Laura Saikku The Heat Exchanger Network Optimization of the Glyphosate Production System Wangyuan, Yuan Zeng-wei, BI Jun A Tale of Two Countries: Patterns of Iron Use in China and India and Their Global Impact Tao Wang, Daniel B. Müller PS8.III Industrial Symbiosis – ROOM 1
Assessing the management of small waste electrical and electronic equipment through substance flow analysis – The example of gold in Germany and the USA Perrine Chancerel, Vera Susanne Rotter
Is there cash in that trash? Exploring industrial symbiosis through a strategic management lens Raymond Paquin, Suzanne Tilleman, Jennifer Howard-Grenville
Development of a tool for optimizing industrial ecology processes in WEEE treatment Eduardo Santos, Sandro Vicente, Pedro Nazareth, Fernanda Margarido, Paulo Ferrão, Carlos Nogueira
Industrial Ecology Applied to Industrial Parks in the French Context Sabrina Brullot, Paul Schalchli, Dimitri Coulon
A comprehensive methodology to calculate WEEE recycling and recovery rates in Portugal Monica Luizio, Susana Ferreira, Eduardo Santos, Paulo Ribeiro
Interplay between industrial ecosystems and environmental governance at different spatial scales: The case of the Gulf of Bothnia heavy industries in Finland and Sweden Olli Salmi, Jyrki Heino, Janne Hukkinen, Mari Pajunen, Maaria Wierink
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Scientific Programme PARALLEL SESSIONS PS8.IV Industrial Ecology in developing countries – ROOM 2
14:30-15:50
PS9.III Industrial Ecology tools for sustainability – ROOM 1
Eco-innovation in the emerging industrial ecosystems - the case of China Dong Ying, Shi Lei
Taking stock of the sustainability of the Oslo water and wastewater network G Venkatesh, Helge Brattebo
Collection point system to manage environmental impacts of informal reuse/ recycling of electronics Eric Williams, Jinglei Yu, Ramzy Kahhat
Greenhouse gas emissions from electricity consumption and conservation perspectives and uncertainties Sampo Soimakallio, Laura Saikku
Development of a tool for optimizing industrial ecology processes in WEEE treatment Eduardo Santos, Sandra Vicente, Pedro Nazareth, Fernanda Margarido, Paulo Ferrão, Carlos Nogueira - tbc
Towards Simulation of Transitions in Energy Emile J. L. Chappin, Gerard P. J. Dijkema Hybrid Life Cycle Assessment of Advanced Biofuel Production and Consumption Scenarios in Scandinavia Ryan M. Bright, Anders Hammer Stromman
Parallel Sessions
PS9.I Designing sustainable cities – the urban and the social metabolisms – AUDITORIUM 2
PS9.IV Visions on new IE-based paradigms towards sustainability – ROOM 2
Designing an Optimal Urban Community Mix for Underground Thermal Energy Storage Systems Ryan Zizzo, Christopher Kennedy, Alan S. Fung, Bill Wong, Bernie McIntyre
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Principles of Ecology: Analogies for Resilient Regional Eco-Industrial Development Paul D. Jensen, Malcolm R. Bailey, Lauren Basson, Emma E. Hellawell, Matthew Leach
Metabolism of building and infrastructure in Japan: Scenario analysis and implications for future waste and carbon management Seiji Hashimoto, Hiroki Tanikawa
Succession Ecology as an Analogue for Sustainable Community Development Michelle Adams
Hour by Hour Analysis of Greenhouse Gas Emissions for a Near-Zero Carbon Condominium Design David Bristow, Russell Richman, Adam Kirsh, Chris Kennedy, Kim Pressnail
Agent-based scenario analysis: a new approach to planning industrial ecosystems Ruud Kempener, Jim Petrie Co-Evolutionary method and toolbox for Agent Based Modeling of industrial network evolution Igor Nikolic, Christopher B. Davis, Emile J.L. Chappin, Gerard P.J. Dijkema
Energy for Melbourne: Past Present and Future Tim Baynes, Xuemei Bai PS9.II Sustainable Resource Management – AUDITORIUM 3
Wednesday, 24 June 10:00-11:00
Energy Greenhouse Gas and Monetary Value Embodied in the Life Cycle Aluminium Import and Export of China: Multi-year Analysis and Policy Implication Chen Weiqiang, Shi Lei
Parallel Sessions
PS10.I Sustainable Resource Management – AUDITORIUM 2
Material Constraints of new Energy Pathways Rene Kleijn, Ester van der Voet
Environmental and economic conditions for landfill mining Joakim Krook, Mats Eklund, Niclas Svensson
Potential Dematerialization of the Australian Economy Graham M. Turner, Heinz Schandl
The role of the automobiles for future aluminium recycling Daniel B. Mueller, Sebastiano Scacchetti
Climate Infrastructure Analysis for Sustainable Resource Management: How Fast Should We Build? How Fast Can We Build? Constantine Samaras, Inês Lima Azevedo
Challenges in closing the cycle for scarce metals in consumer products – an industry perspective Christina E.M. Meskers, Christian Hagelüken
Scientific Programme PARALLEL SESSIONS PS10.II Sustainable Consumption – AUDITORIUM 3 Munich 2058 – Pathways to a Carbon Free City Stefan Lechtenböhmer , Dieter Seifried, Dr. Kora Kristof System innovation for Mobility Theo Geerken, An Vercalsteren, Mads Borup
Dynamic LCA Approach for Decision Support on Sustainable Bio-electricity Development Chris Davis, Igor Nikolic, Gerard Dijkema
Diversifying options for household mobility: Reducing vehicle energy consumption with capacity matching strategies Kevin Bolon, Greg Keoleian, Lidia Kostyniuk
Global Resource Flows and Product Flows: Tracking Inter-Regional Pathways from Resource Extraction to Product Consumption Faye Duchin, Stephen Levine
PS10.III Managing end-of-life products – ROOM 1 Development of Integrated Framework for Sustainability Evaluation of Sanitation Systems in Small Towns of Vietnam Pham Ngoc Bao, Keisuke Hanaki, Toshiya Aramaki Artery-Vein Cooperation in Material Cycles Rokuta Inaba, Minoru Fujii, Keisuke Nansai, Masahiro Osako The Role of Displaced Production for Reuse and Recycling Roland Geyer, Vered Doctori Blass PS10.IV Industrial Ecology tools for sustainability – ROOM 2 A Review and Database of National Sustainable Development Indicators toward the next generation of sustainable indicator system Tomohiro Tasaki, Yasuko Kameyama, Seiji Hashimoto, Yuichi Moriguchi, Hideo Harasawa Technological change in Swiss thermal waste treatment - A socio-technical appraisal Andy Spoerri, Daniel J. Lang Roland W. Scholz Sustainable Value in Mineral Extractive Industry João Henriques, Justina Catarino, Anabela Maia, Jorge Alexandre 11:30-12:50
Visualization of Inter-industry Material Flow Based on Triangularization of Physical Input-Output Tables Yasushi Kondo, Kenichi Nakajima, Shinichiro Nakamura
PS11.II Eco-design: products and services of the future – AUDITORIUM 3 Dealing with unknowns – How to optimise nano material production Marcel Weil, Sascha Crizeli, Stefan Forero Eco-Design by Natural Materials: Jute Fibers Cristiano Alves da Silva, Samuel Ceziano R. Furtado, Paulo Manuel Cadete Ferrão, Arlindo Silva, Sandra M. da Luz, Manuel Freitas Technology selection for improvement of fuel economy across an automaker’s vehicle fleet Trisha Montalbo, Theresa M. Lee, Richard Roth, Randolph Kirchain, Comparison of Traditional Retail and E-commerce Logistics for Electronic Products Chris Hendrickson, Paulina Jaramillo, Scott Matthews, Amy Nagengast, Rachel Nealer, Chris Weber PS11.III Sustainable Resource Management – ROOM 1 Impacts of decoupling on future supply of waste and residues – The case of wood Witold-Roger Poganietz, Silke Feifel, Liselotte Schebek Tracking embodied environmental factors in the global trade system: the case of CO2 emissions and material flows Stefan Giljum, Christian Lutz
Parallel Sessions
PS11.I Industrial Ecology tools for sustainability – AUDITORIUM 2 Comprehending Variation and Uncertainty in Streamlined Quantitative Life Cycle Assessment Methods Jeffrey B. Dahmus, Elsa A. Olivetti, Jeremy R. Gregory, Randolph E. Kirchain
Resource Management and Integration of a Sea Water Pumped-Storage System in the island of São Miguel Filipa Amorim, André Pina, Carlos Silva, Christos S. Ioakimidis, Paulo Cadete Ferrao
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Scientific Programme PARALLEL SESSIONS Life cycle assessment of an integrated biofuels production system in Brazil Simone Pereira de Souza, Sergio Almeida Pacca, Claudinei Andreoli, Márcio Turra de Ávila
A Scaling Factor for the Timing of GHG Emissions in LCA Alissa Kendall PS12.III Visions on new IE-based paradigms towards sustainability – ROOM 1
PS11.IV Sustainable Consumption – ROOM 2 From Consumer to Prosumer – Development of new trading and auction cultures to promote sustainable consumption Lorenz Erdmann, Christine Henseling Information source and environmentally friendly consumption in the East Asian perspectives Midori Aoyagi-Usui Humanitarian aid and ecological sustainability. The Nicobar Islands in the aftermath of the tsunami Simron Jit Singh, Willibald Haas
How Complex are Subway Networks? Sybil Derrible, Christopher Kennedy Mineral Carbonation as the core of an Industrial Ecology for Energy-Intensive Minerals Conversion Jim Petrie, Geoff Brent Green Islands Project: An integrated sociotechno-economic framework towards the implementation of a sustainable energy system in the island of São Miguel Azores Carlos A. Santos Silva, Christos Ioakimidis, Paulo Ferrão PS12.IV Industrial Symbiosis – ROOM 2
Industrial Ecology and Systems of Provision Stefan Goessling-Reisemann, Arnim von Gleich 14:00-15:00
Parallel Sessions
18 PS12.I Sustainable Consumption – AUDITORIUM 2 Economic and Greenhouse Gas Implications of Delivering Canadian Oil Sands in the United States Aweewan Mangmeechai, H. Scott Matthews, Chris T. Hendrickson, W. Michael Griffin, Paulina Jaramillo Environmental Overhead of Labor Embodied in China-U.S. Trade based on Adjusted Trade Data Ming Xu, Eric Williams, Braden Allenby Carbon Saving and Cost-Effectiveness from Efficiency Measures: Improving Decision Making Under Uncertainty Inês Lima Azevedo, Constantine Samaras PS12.II Sustainable Resource Management – AUDITORIUM 3 Sustainable resource management in food production – the ecological backpack of food products Holger Rohn, Michael Lettenmeier A model for assessing food production systems’ sensitivity to phosphate rock shortages at the world scale Marion Dumas, Roland Scholz
Potential of urban and regional symbiosis among sewage sludge treatment plants and industrial factories through sludge-toliquid conversion technology Noboru Yoshida, Yugo Yamamoto, Tohru Morioka, Takayuki Ihara, Masayuki Kai, Hirotaka Mabuse MgMetallic - a concise serious game Gerard P.J. Dijkema Assessment of Sulfur Metabolism in a Chinese Fine Chemical Industrial Park Jinping Tian , Han SHI, Lvjun Chen
Posters Poster Session I P1. The ISIE student chapter Vered Doctori-Blass
P18. Environmental considerations on land use impact for design and development of biopolymers Daniel Garraín, Rosario Vidal, Vicente Franco, Carlos Muñoz, David Cebrian-Tarrason
P2. European Joint Research Centre Miguel Brandão
P19. Dematerialized Solar-Powered Eco-Streetlight Raul Garcia-Lozano, Xavier Gabarrell, Joan Rieradevall
Designing Sustainable Cities - The Urban and the Social Metabolisms P3. How does network size affects the energy use of subway systems? Sybil Derrible, Christopher Kennedy
P20. Ecological Architecture as Driver of Holistic Sustainable Building Practices Maria Zapata
P4. Could we learn it from honey-bees (Apis mellifera)? Tamara Galonja-Coghill, Ana Prcic, Djordje Mrkic P5. Monitoring the House sparrow Passer domesticus population at different scales of urbanization Coimbatore India Dhanya R, Ranjini J, Azeez P6. Legal and Policy Aspects of Developing Ecocities Asanga Gunawansa P7. Social Metabolism for Livable City: The Seremban Municipality Case Shaharudin Idrus,Abdul Samad Hadi, Abdul Hadi Harman Shah, Ahmad Fariz Mohamed P8. Achieving Circular Economy through Urban Symbiosis in Dalian (China) Shizuka Hashimoto, Tsuyoshi Fujita, Xudong Chen, Yong Geng P9. WECOBIS - An Harmonized Builiding Product Information System on Application Health and Environment Martina Klingele, Werner Geiger, Wolfgang Linden, Sepp Starzner, Rainer Weideman, Petra WurmerWeiß P10. Darjeeling: Making sanatorium town a sustainable city Bina Sengar P11. Transforming cities: Introducing adaptability in existing residential buildings through reuse and disassembly strategies for retrofitting Anne Paduart, Wim Debacker, Caroline Henrotay, Willy Patrick De Wilde, Hendrik Hendrickx P12. Modeling Transitions Towards Sustainability in the Bernam-Linggi Region Malaysia Abdul Hadi Harman Shah, Abdul Samad Hadi, Shaharudin Idrus, Ahmad Fariz Mohamed P13. Ecoinnovation in the Skin of Cities to Face Global Warming Jordi Oliver-Solà, Ramon Farreny, Raul GarciaLozano, Alejandro Josa, Xavier Gabarrell, Joan Rieradevall P14. Student Mobility and it’s effect on the Development of a Sustainable Urban Environment in Metropolitan Valparaíso Chile. Luis Agustín Alvarez Aránguiz, Lisandro Silva Arriola, Marcela Soto Caro Eco-Design: Products and Services of the Future P15. Environmental impacts of nanotechnology: A life cycle analysis of QDPV modules Thomas L. Theis, Hatice Sengul P16. Evaluation of the Introduction of Active Disassembling Fasteners using Hydrogen Storing Materials in Electronic Appliances: An LCA by the Waste IO Method Eiji Yamasue, Kazuyo Matsubae, Yasushi Kondo, Shinichiro Nakamura, Keiichi N Ishihara P17. Post-disaster shelter design: the process from aid to sustainable development Caroline Henrotay; Wim Debacker; Anne Paduart, Hendrik, Hendrick, Marijke.mollaert, Willy Patrick De Wilde
Environmentally Extended Input Output P21. EXIOBASE: Principles and design of a database for multi-region input-output tables and environmental extensions Reinout Heijungs, Arjan de Koning, Gjalt Huppes P22. A methodological framework to assess environmental impacts caused by material flows of an economy: the ENVIMAT approach Jyri Seppälä Sirkka Koskela, Ilmo Mäenpää, Tuomas Mattila P23. Methodology for the Construction of an International Supply-Use Table M.C. Bouwmeester, J. Oosterhaven P24. The Carbon Footprint of Nations - A global trade-linked analysis Edga Hertwich, Glen Peters Industrial Ecology in Developing Countries P25. Reverse Logistics Activities for Renewable Resource Industry: a case study from Tianjin in China Xu He P26. Ecosystem Approach for Sustainable Industrial Hazardous Waste Management in Malaysia Ahmad Fariz Mohamed, Shaharudin Idrus, Abdul Samad Hadi, Abdul Hadi Harman Shah P27. Economic metabolism And Management in circular economy: analysis framework Junfeng Wang, Huiming Li, Xiaodan gui, Wenjing liu P28. Evaluation of 3R Waste Eco-Efficiency in the Petroleum and Petrochemical Group Map Ta Phut Industrial Estate Thailand Kitikorn Charmondusit, Umaporn Khwankue P29. Eco-Efficiency Assessment as a Support Tool for Cleaner Technology: Case Study of the Canned Pineapple Industry in Thailand Kamonporn Dechpong, Kitikorn Charmondusit P30. A Case Study of the Evolution of a Phosphorus and Coal Chemical Industrial Ecosystem on the Regional Scale Hui Gao, Dingjiang Chen, Shanying Hu P31. Comparison of industrial symbiosis delivery models in developed and developing nations D. Rachel Lombardi, James Woodcock, Adrian Murphy, Paul Knuckle, Peter Laybourn P32. Linking eco-industrial development to climate change adaptation in the Pt. LIsas Industrial Estate Trinidad Weslynne Ashton, Suzana Russell P33. SWOT Analysis for Discussion of Success Factors and Obstacles on EIP Projects in Several Asian Countries Juan LIU, Toru MATSUMOTO, Yonghai XUE P34. Industrial symbiosis in Nanjangud: resource flows and cooperation in Indian eco-industrial networks Ariana Bain, Megha Shenoy P35. Putting Theory into Practice in China: Creating a sustainable energy infrastructure in Tianjin Economic Technologic Development Area (TEDA) BinBin Jiang, Shi Han
Industrial Ecology tools for Sustainability P36. Environmental Performance of the Portuguese Dairy Sector using a life cycle aproach Érica Geraldes Castanheira, Ana Cláudia Dias, Luís Arroja, Rui Amaro P37. Material Budget of a Biosphere Reserve Material Flow Indicators as a tool for identifying potential environmental impacts and for certification of prospective Biosphere Reserve aspirants Frank Hartmann, Yves Deluz P38. Local development and definition of the common good: how the method of metabolism may help to define the pertinent scale? Nicolas Buclet , Sabrina Brullot P39. Assessing the environmental impact of natural cork stoppers by using Life Cycle Assessment Rui Pedro Silva, Belmira Neto P40. Life Cycle Inventory Analyses for CO2 Emission and Cost of District Heating and Cooling Systems Using Wastewater Heat Takashi Ikegami Toshiya Aramaki, Keisuke Hanaki P41. What´s new in STAN 2 Oliver Cencic, Helmut Rechberger P42. Disaggregated decoupling indicators of the European manufacturing industry exemplariliy for Germany Sibylle Wursthorn, Witold-Roger.Poganietz, Liselotte Schebek P43. Optimization of Sawmill By-Product Flows in Southeastern British Columbia Yu Li, Jérôme Alteyrac, Paul McFarlane P44. Pavement Asset Management and Optimization Model: Informing Policy and Enhancing Sustainability Han Zhang, Gregory A. Keoleian, Michael D. Lepech P45. Characterizing and Managing Uncertainty in Life Cycle Inventories Eric Williams, Christopher Weber, Troy Hawkins P46. The Yin and Yang of the global economy? Biophysical constraints and enabling factors to the socio-economic development of Japan and Australia Heinz Schandl, Hiroki Tanikawa, Clemens Grunbuhel, Kozo Mayumi P47. LCA of the South African Sugar Industry Livison Mashoko Charles Mbohwa, Valerie Thomas P48. Life Cycle Optimization for Residential Air Conditioning Replacement Robert De Kleine, Gregory Keoleian P49. Design Tool for Environmentally Conscious Metal Cleaning Process Riichiro Kimura, Yasunori Kikuchi, Masahiko Hirao P50. Analysis on international policy trend of MFA (Material Flow Accounting/Analysis)-based on indicators for resource productivity and the possibility of international cooperation for developing countries Chika Aoki-Suzuki, Yasuhiko Hotta, Magnus Bengtsson P51. Dynamic substance flow analysis of brominated flame retardants in Japan:A basis for risk assessment with life-cycle of chemicals Satoshi Managaki, Yasukazu Yokoyama, Shigeki Masunaga, Hiroki Hondo P52. Well to wheel analysis of hydrogen as an energy carrier Rosa Gudmundsdottir, Brynhildur Daví_sdóttir P53. IMEA: IMports Environmental Accounting: towards an integrated framework Damien Friot, Isabelle Blanc, Julia Steinberger, Arnold Tukker, Ilmo Mäenpää, An Verclasteren
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Posters P54. A quantitative assessment of the impact of policies on the Ecological and Carbon Footprint of Northern Ireland using the REAP Model Robin Curry
P74. Extending industrial ecology principles to nonmaterial flows: the “Widen Symbiosis” Francesco Fusco Girard
P55. Credentials for the ‘green and clean’ image of New Zealand Barbara Nebel
Managing End-of-Life Products P75. ReLCD - Recycling and ReUse of LCD Panels Bernd Kopacek
P56. LCA of highways: a hybrid approach to the construction and use phase Maria Fernanda Padilla, Joseph Marriott, Melissa Bilec, Amy E. Landis
P76. Evaluating the interest of making a road safety device with recycled plastics by LCA Carla L. Simões, Susana M. Xará, Carlos A. Bernardo
Industrial Symbiosis P57. Principles on the Design of EIP for Chemical Industry and sustainable development Evaluation Yu Chen, Su-ling Liu, Yun Zhang, Shu-shen Zhang, Hong-bo Zheng, Lei Cheng P58. Historical development of the Kymi EcoIndustrial Park – the evolution of an industrial symbiosis in Finland Suvi Pakarinen, Laura Sokka, Matti Melanen, Ari Nissinen P59. Unifying and extending eco-industrial symbiosis typologies in order to develop new computer-aided tools for industrial ecology practices Patricia Le Moenner, Cyril Adoue P60. Methods and tools for reglementary evaluation of industrial ecology projects Patricia Le Moenner, Cyril Adoue P61. Developing an industrial symbiosis using an interactive tool: Application in Bécancour Waterfront Industrial Park Karine Markewitz, Jean-Francois Vermette, Claude Maheux-Picard, Hélène Gignac
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P62. Synergy Research Program: The tool Presteo© Adoue Cyril, Julien Saint Amand Florian P63. Industrial Symbiosis in Biofuel Production Industries: A Categorization of Synergies Michael Martin, Mats Eklund P64. Accounting for the Greenhouse Gas benefits of Industrial Symbiosis under PAS 2050 David Cobbledick, Lauren Basson, Roland Clift, Anil Kainth
P77. End-of-life management of glass packaging in Trinidad and Tobago Suzana Russell P78. Potential of increased sorting efficiency for combustibles in Sweden- Environmental and economic implications Niclas Svensson, Joakim Krook, Mats Eklund P79. Industrial project sustainability with simplified pre-study analysis. Case study: waste concrete recycling in the Stockholm region Graham Aid, Nils Brandt,Monika Olsson P80. Dynamic Flow Analysis of PVC in China Dingjiang Chen, Ning Yang, Shanying Hu P81. The role of collective take-back schemes in WEEE management: the Portuguese case study Eduardo Santos, Mónica Luízio, Paulo Ribeiro, Paulo Ferrão, Fernando Lamy da Fontoura P82. A Comparison of End-of-Life Strategies for Used Personal Computer Recycling in a Developed and Developing Country Aya Yoshida, Tomohiro Tasaki, Kenichi Nakajima, Atsushi Terazono P83. The potential of e-waste as secondary resources – What kind of e-waste should we focus on? Masahiro Oguchi, Akiko Kida, Hirofumi Sakanakura, Shinsuke Murakami P84. Quantification and characterization of discarded batteries in Yaoundé (Cameroon) from the perspective of health safety and environmental protection Samuel Tetsopgang, Gilbert Kuepouo
P66. Systems make it possible people make it happen! Sabrina Brullot
P85. Application of LCA as a CommunicationSupport Tool for Stakeholders involved in Plastics Recycling System Jun Nakatani, Kana Susuki, Masahiko Hirao P86. New strategies for improved End-of-Life of vehicles Carlos Muñoz, Rosario Vidal, Daniel Justel, Daniel Garraín, Vicente Franco
P67. An eco industrial park as a regional business strategy to promote economic development Inês Costa, Paulo Ferrão
P87. If biofuels are the answer what was the question? Eric Johnson
P68. Industrial symbiosis’s facilitation tools: a Portuguese update Inês Costa, Rita Pinto, Paulo Ferrão
P88. Approaches to eco-efficiency in public procurement Katriina Parikka-Alhola, Ari Nissinen
P69. Better Practices for the Construction of EcoIndustrial Parks Tracy Casavant, George Friedrich, Emilie Ouellet
P89. Greenhouse gas emissions from transportation of goods for French consumption Sébastien Dente, Troy Hawkins
P70. Implementing Large-Scale Industrial Ecology through Geographic Information Systems Tracy Casavant, Jenny Rustemeyer, Emilie Ouellet
P90. Life Cycle Assessment of Soybean Biodiesel Coupled to a Sugarcane-Ethanol PlantSimone Pereira de Souza, Claudinei Andreoli
P71. TaigaNova Eco-Industrial Park – What’s happening in the Canadian Oil Sands? Tracy Casavant, Jaspal Marwah, Jeff Herold, Jenny Rustemeyer, Clay Braziller, Emilie Ouellet
P91. The embodied carbon emissions of household consumption in Lisbon: comparing single region and multi region environmental IO models João Rodrigues, Leonardo Rosado
P72. People Contribute to Success of Eco-Industrial Projects Tracy Casavant, Emilie Ouellet, Jaspal Marwah
P92. The development of the Italian database for LCA information (I-LCA) as tool for Sustainability Lorenzo Maiorino, Laura Cutaia, Stefania Minestrini
P73. Environmental impacts of inter-firm collaboration based on a life cycle approach Dowon Kim, Jane C Powell
P93. Application to Beef Production of a Methodology to Integrate Private and Monetised Environmental Costs
P65. EnvISion Eco-Industrial Development: South Humber Bank Malcolm R. Bailey, Paul D. Jensen, Lauren Basson, Emma E. Hellawell, Matthew Leach
Ricardo Teixeira, Clara Fiúza, Tiago Domingos P94. Environmental Comparison of Maize Produced in Portugal and Imported from Argentina: A Ma(i) ze of Options Ricardo Teixeira, Tatiana Valada, Ana Simões, Oriana Rodrigues, Tiago Domingos P95. Carbon Abatement of Photovoltaic (PV) Electricity at the Margin Deepak Sivaraman, Gregory A. Keoleian P96. Green procurement practice in Norwegian municipalities still a long way to go Ottar Michelsen, Luitzen de Boer P97. Designing an Integrated Model for Urban Energy Demand Ana Gonçalves, Tiago Domingos P98. Accounting GHG emissions in Shopping Centers Ana Gonçalves, Ana Catarina Henriques, Ricardo Teixeira, Tiago Domingos Sustainable Resource Management P99. Underground Thermal Energy Storage: A Review of Current Technologies Ryan Zizzo, Christopher Kennedy, Alan S. Fung, Bill Wong, Bernie McIntyre P100.Energy Vs. Feedstock: An Analysis of the GHG emissions and the emission reduction strategies for the Chemical Sector Paulina Jaramillo, W. Michael Griffin, H. Scott Matthews P101. CO2 Life Cycle Inventory in an Enhanced Oil Recovery System Paulina Jaramillo, Sean T. McCoy, W. Michael Griffing, H. Scott Matthews P102. Sustainability and multi-functionality of biobased value chains Johan Pettersen, Christian Solli P103. Implications of international trade in the Finnish forest industry carbon balance Laura Saikku P104. Analysis of the Current Status of Urban Mining of Metals in Japan Kohmei Halada P105. Breaks in trends of material flow indicators in the Czech Republic after joining the European Union Jan Kovanda, Jan Weinzettel P106. Water resources and human health under global Climate Change – improved sanitation and sound public governance as main adaptive measures for sustainable resources management in the Brazilian cities Silneiton Favero-Silva P107. Evaluation of Recyclability of Elements and Materials in Electric Home Appliances using Urbanore TMR Ryota Minamino, Eiji Yamasue, Hideyuki Okumura, Keiichi N Ishihara P108. Tools for Sustainability in Industry by Recovery of the Secondary Materials Ecaterina Matei, Andra Stoica, Cristian Predescu, Andrei Predescu, Andrei Berbecaru, Mirela Sohaciu P109. Building-Scale Alternative Energy: A Comparative Analysis for the Ontario Case David Bristow, Chris Kennedy P110. Towards a Sustainable Recycling Society Juha Kaila, Maria Törn P111. Life Cycle Analysis Of Ceramic Versus Painting Materials Applied To External Walls Surgelas Flávia Maria Achão, Marques Guilherme Fernandes, Rodrigues Conrado de Souza P112. A model based study to explore sustainable resource management
Posters Yogendra Shastri, Urmila Diwekar, Heriberto Cabezas, James Williamson, Norma Lewis P113. Technologies products and strategies with resource efficiency potentials – results from current research studies Holger Rohn, Michael Lettenmeier, Claus Lang-Koetz, Nico Pastewski P114. A conceptual framework for a multi-level analysis of the global aluminum cycle - linkage with international trade energy and emission Gang Liu, Sebastiano Scacchetti, Daniel B. Mueller P115. Sustainability index of manufactured products based on exergy and life cycle approach A. Tharumarajah, P. Koltun P116. The use of Biomass as an energy source in the energy mixture of a remote island and the sustainable resource management of the energy system C.S. Ioakimidis, André Pina, Carlos Silva, Paulo Cadete Ferrão P117. Developing a methodology to calculate a carbon life cycle analysis of mountaintop removal mining in the U.S. Samir Doshi P118. Measurability of sustainable mineral resource management Deborah J. Shields, Slavko Šolar
P131. Integrating Industrial Ecology and Industrial Dynamics: Implications for Sustainability Science Yarime Masaru
Poster Session II
P149. Identifying the importance of local public services in designing sustainable cities Hogne Nersund Larsen
Designing Sustainable Cities - The Urban and the Social Metabolisms P132. Post-industrial redevelopment and the quest for sustainability Luís Loures
P150. Sustainable urban metabolism scenarios for Japanese cities Hiroki Tanikawa, Seiji Hashimoto, Yasuyo Matsubae-Yokoyama, Shigemi Kagawa, Ichiro Daigo, Hidefumi Imura
P133. Urban Carbon Sinks - Potential in the Greater Toronto Area Eugene Mohareb, Adrian Mohareb, Christopher A Kennedy
P151. Economic feasibility of a residential energy services company Joe Marriott, Kullapa Soratana
P134. Effects of Heat Island Phenomenon on Energy Consumption in the Commercial and the Residential Sectors Yujiro Hirano, Hidefumi Imura P135. Quantifying the relationship between local cool island intensity of urban park and its land use by IKONOS and ASTER data Xin Cao, Akio Onishi, Jin Chen, Hidefumi Imura P136. Identifying the importance of local public services in designing sustainable cities Hogne Nersund Larsen
P119. Polyester use and recycling in California- from bottles to fleece Brandon Kuczenski, Roland Geyer
P137. Sustainable urban metabolism scenarios for Japanese cities Hiroki Tanikawa, Seiji Hashimoto, Yasuyo Matsubae-Yokoyama, Shigemi Kagawa, Ichiro Daigo, Hidefumi Imura
P120. Life cycle energy and environmental assessment of a wave energy system João Santos, Fausto Freire
P138. Economic feasibility of a residential energy services company Joe Marriott, Kullapa Soratana
P121. Material Flow Analysis of Phosphorus in Asia: Focusing on the secondary resources Kazuyo Matsubae-Yokoyama, Hironari Kubo, Kenichi Nakajima, Tetsuya Nagasaka
P139. Study on CO2 emission of households sector by different future scenarios of spatial distributions in Nagoya city Yosuke Takahira, Akio Onishi, Hiroki Tanikawa, Hidefumi Imura
P122. Assessing GHG benefits of Chains of Bioenergy E. van der Voet, L. Luo, L. van Oers P123. Can Transportation Fuels Derived from Oil Sands be Sustainable? Joule A. Bergerson, Alex D. Charpentier, Jennifer McKellar, Heather L. MacLean, David Keith P124. Environmental impacts of different supply options of Lithium – implication for the LCA of a Li-Ion Battery for electric vehicles Anna Stamp, Daniel J. Lang, Patrick Waeger Visions on new IE-based paradigms toward Sustainability P125. Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) Enabled Sustainability Framework for Sustainable Value Chains of Forest-based Products Anthony Halog P126. Complexity and Resilience of Input-output Economy: A Network View Ming Xu, Brad Allenby P127. Territorial factors and Industrial Ecology Bahers Jean-Baptiste, Julien Saint Amand Florian P128. Fostering Industrial Symbiosis with AgentBased Simulation and Participatory Modeling David Batten P129. Modelling the sustainable development of different evolutionary pathways of industrial networks Ruud Kempener, Jim Petrie P130. Resilient socio-technical systems – Fit for turbulent environments? Arnim von Gleich, Sönke Stührmann, Stefan Göbling-Reisemann
by IKONOS and ASTER data Xin Cao, Akio Onishi, Jin Chen, Hidefumi Imura
P152. Study on CO2 emission of households sector by different future scenarios of spatial distributions in Nagoya city Yosuke Takahira, Akio Onishi, Hiroki Tanikawa, Hidefumi Imura P153. Influences of Building Characteristics to Land Surface Temperature in Centre of Nagoya City Japan Akio Onishi, Xin Cao, Masafumi Morisugi, Hiroki Tanikawa, Osamu Higashi, Hidefumi Imura P154. Influence of Land use Change on River Discharge in River Basin of Nagoya City Japan Minami Sugimoto, Akio Onishi, Kaoru Inoue, Akito Murayama, Hiroyuki Shimizu P155. Evaluating Climate Change Mitigation Projects and Programs on a Local Level - Results from the Stockholm Climate Investment Program 2004 – 2008 Stefan Johansson, Nils Brandt, Ronald Wennersten P156. Urban environmental responsibility Alexandra Marques, Tiago Domingos P157. The Water-soil Issues Related to the Urban Ecosystem of Dongying City Ling Han
P140. Influences of Building Characteristics to Land Surface Temperature in Centre of Nagoya City Japan Akio Onishi, Xin Cao, Masafumi Morisugi, Hiroki Tanikawa, Osamu Higashi, Hidefumi Imura
Eco-Design: Products and Services of the Future P158. Greenhouse Gas Emissions Payback and Economic Assessment for Lightweighted Vehicles using Aluminum and High Strength Steel Hyung-Ju Kim, Greg Keoleian, Steven J. Skerlos
P141. Influence of Land use Change on River Discharge in River Basin of Nagoya City Japan Minami Sugimoto, Akio Onishi, Kaoru Inoue, Akito Murayama, Hiroyuki Shimizu
P159. Life Cycle Thinking applied to an Ecodesigner Innovative Process Armando Caldeira Pires, Sandra Maria da Luz, Paulo Manuel Cadete Ferrão
P142. Evaluating Climate Change Mitigation Projects and Programs on a Local Level - Results from the Stockholm Climate Investment Program 2004 – 2008 Stefan Johansson, Nils Brandt, Ronald Wennersten
P160. Synthesis and characterization of a novel iron carbonate cement that can utilize waste steel dust and trap CO2 David A. Stone, Janick Artiola, Joan Curry
P143. Urban environmental responsibility Alexandra Marques, Tiago Domingos
P161. ELCD and eco-design tool in a CAE environment David Cebrian-Tarrason, Alex Paris, Rosario Vidal
P144. The Water-soil Issues Related to the Urban Ecosystem of Dongying City Ling Han P145. Impacts of urbanization on energy consumption and carbon emissions Phetkeo Poumanyvong, Shinji kaneko Eco-Design: Products and Services of the Future P146. Urban Carbon Sinks - Potential in the Greater Toronto Area Eugene Mohareb, Adrian Mohareb, Christopher A Kennedy P147. Effects of Heat Island Phenomenon on Energy Consumption in the Commercial and the Residential Sectors Yujiro Hirano, Hidefumi Imura P148. Quantifying the relationship between local cool island intensity of urban park and its land use
P162. Utilizing ecological design to restore natural and social communities in Appalachian coal mined landscapes Samir Doshi Environmentally Extended Input Output P163. Application of input output analysis in calculation of external costs of electricity consumption within EU Jan Weinzettel, Miroslav Havránek P164. Raw Material Equivalents of Austrian Trade Flows Anke Schaffartzik Nina Eisenmenger, Helga Weisz P165. Towards environmental labelling: Offshoring and sustainable development María Ángeles Cadarso Vecina, Nuria Gómez Sanz, Luis Antonio Lopez Santiago, Maria Angeles Tobarra Gómez
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Posters P166. Score-based Sustainability Assessment with Inter-regional Resources Dependency in China Keishiro Hara, Michinori Uwasu, Helmut Yabar, Haiyan Zhang, Terukazu Kumazawa, Tohru Morioka Industrial Ecology in Developing Countries P167. Application of Life Cycle Assessment to the Solid Waste Management and Treatment in Santa Clara, Cuba Teresa Cárdenas Ferrer, Elena Rosa Domínguez, Ronaldo Santos Herrero, Ana Margarita Contreras Moya, Jorge Dominguez P168. Cumulative effect assessment of Industrial Statean approach toward sustainability in developing countries Saideh Rasouli P169. Industrial Pollution of Voronezh River Basin Sergey Popov P170. An Evaluation Method of Eco-Factor of Economy Growth Yadong Yu, Shanying Hu, Jingzhu Shen, Dingjiang Chen, Yong Jin P171. UNECE Protocol on Pollutant Release and Transfer Register as mechanism for the implementation the provisions in chapter 19 of Agenda-21 and the Plan Implementation of the 2002 World Summit on Sustainable Development Nune Hovhannisyan, Diana Selipanova P172. Journey to world top emitter – an analysis of the driving forces of China’s recent CO2 emissions surge Dabo Guan, Glen P. Peters, Christopher L. Weber, Klaus Hubacek
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P173. Study on the Relationship between Waste Emissions and Economic Growth Du Tao, LU Zhongwu P174. Sustainable Development in ChinaChallenges for Research and Education Zhichang Cai, Xingqiang Song, Ronald Wennersten P175. Developing of complex analytical systems for resolving the problem of water supply for municipal and industrial use (basing on the example of the city of Krakow Poland). Witold Reczynski, Boguslaw Bas, Malgorzta Jakubowska, Ewa Niewiara
Muriel Maillefert, Paul Schalchli P183. A comparative modeling study on metal pollutants in urban waters between Beijing China and Stockholm Sweden -Diffuse sources and fate analysis Qing Cui, Nils Brandt, Maria E. Malmström P184. Sustainable freight transport – a vision until 2050 Antikainen Riina, Mattila Tuomas, Holma Anne, Stephan Helmreich P185. Solution Spaces for Decision-Making - A Transdisciplinary Assessment of Sustainability along the Global Uranium Value-Added Chain Michel Maiorano, Claudia Binder, Andrea Schenker-Wicki P186. From Laboratory to Industrial Scale Daniel Kellenberger P187. Multi-values of Evaluating Sustainability: the case of climate change mitigation projects Qie Sun, Ronald Wennersten, Nils Brandt P188. Analyzing Potential of Industrial Pollution Reduction by Bottom-up Technology Model: Case Study of China Pulp Industry Chao Zhang, Zongguo Wen, Jining Chen P189. Performance and evolution of a biorefinery cluster Igor Nikolic, Catherine M. Chiong Meza, Gerard Dijkema P190. Transformation innovation and adaptation for sustainability – integrating natural and social sciences Helga Ögmundardóttir, Brynhildur Davíðsdóttir P191. Economic evaluation of sectoral objectives of mitigating greenhouse gas emissions in Iceland Brynhildur Davidsdottir, Daði Már Kristófersson P192. Measuring Sustainable Energy Development (SED): linking SED indicators to dynamics of change Brynhildur Davidsdottir, Dan Basoli P193. Scenario development for sustainable deployment of renewable power sources -A case study focusing on photovoltaic systems introduction scenarios in Taiwanese power system Yu-Ming Kuo, Yasuhiro Fukushima
P176. A Comparison of Instruments for Chinese Greenhouse Gases Mitigation Bo Xu, Ronald Wennersten, Nils Brandt
P194. The Norwegian Households’ Perception: Will Wood-pellet Heating Systems be less Adopted in the Future? Bertha Maya Sopha, Geir Skjevrak, Edgar Hertwich, Christian A. Klöckner
P177. Life-cycle based comparison of the reuse of agricultural residues as fuel and feedstocks in South India Weslynne Ashton, Ariana Bain, Trisha Shrum
P195. Facilitating Industrial Ecology Systems Understanding through Fostering Collective Intelligence Chris Davis, Igor Nikolic, Gerard Dijkema
Industrial Ecology tools for Sustainability P178. The impact of bacteriophages in bacteria removal associated with Soba Stabilisation Station efficiency Ayman Ahmed Abedallah Elshayeb P179. System Analysis of Integrated Biorefineries Lin Luo, Ester van der Voet, Gjalt Huppes P180. Thermodynamic Analysis of Ethanol Production from Corn Stover Wenjie Liao, Gjalt Huppes, Reinout Heijungs, Lin Luo P181. Water consumption Greenhouse Gas and Economic Implications of Oil Shale in the United States Aweewan Mangmeechai, H Scott Matthews, W. Michael Griffin, Paulina Jaramillo P182. Construction of Methodology and Tools for the Coordination Processes Analysis in the Implementation of Industrial Ecology
P196. Integration of assessment tools Tatiana Raquel Alves Valada, Ricardo Teixeira, Alexandra Marques,Tiago Domingos P197. Extended Exergy Accounting of products Laura Talens Peiró, Gara Villalba Méndez, Enrico Sciubba P198. Application of Substance Flow Analysis to Assess Three Commercial Manufacturing Processes of Glyphosate Jinping Tian, Lvjun Chen P199. Opportunity Cost Based Analysis of Corporate Eco-Efficiency: A Methodology and its Application to the CO2-Efficiency of German Companies Tobias Hahn, Frank Figge, Andrea Liesen Industrial Symbiosis P200. Applying the Cohen-Rosenthall Matrix of Potential Synergies to the Devens Eco Park Peter Lowitt, Neil Angus P201. Evaluation of Innovative Municipal Solid
Waste Management through Urban Symbiosis: A Case of Kawasaki Yong Geng, Fujita Tsuyoshi, Mr.Chen Xudong P202. Building-up eco-industry park in an integrated iron & steel enterprise Weijun Bao, Huiquan Li, Yi Zhang P203. Applying Industrial Ecology Criteria to Farming Systems in Mexico Gemma Cervantes Torre-Marín, Jenni Arce López, Penelope González Zenteno, Fabián Robles Martínez P204. How to implement industrial symbiosis in France? Sabrina Brullot P205. Ulsan Eco-Industrial Park initiative: Implementation of industrial symbiosis with locally devised strategies Hung-Suck Park, Jung-Hoon Kim, Sang-Yoon Lee, Shishir Kumar Behera P206. Success Stories of By-product Synergies in Demonstration Projects for Eco-industrial Development in Korea Ban Yong Un, Jeong Hurnkun, Hwang Gyu Hwan P207. Accelerating the Use of Inorganic By-Products in Infrastructure Projects Albena Bossilkov P208. Study on eco-industrial composite symbiosis network for oil-chemical industrial park and evaluation for its stability Ling Xu, Hongbo Zheng, Chong Chen P209. Industrial Symbiosis in Australia – Years in the Making Albena Bossilkov, Karin Schianetz P210. A study on the spatial scale of recyclable organic resource circulation Minoru Fujii, Tsuyoshi Fujita, Shizuka Hashimoto P211. Industrial ecology as strategy for regional development: Case study of the canton of Valais Switzerland Benoit Charriere, Suren Erkman P212. Role of Japanese Eco-town Projects in Regional and National Material Circulation: the case of Kitakyushu EIP Toru Matsumoto, Tadashi Tsuruta, Atsushi Fujiyama P213. Quantifying the Potential of Industrial Symbiosis to Mitigate Climate Change Han Shi P214. Quantifying life cycle environmental impacts of the beneficial use of secondary industrial materials in Pennsylvania USA Matthew J Eckelman, Marian R Chertow Managing End-of-Life Products P215. Pre-recycling and recycling behavior. Case study: Belarus and Sweden Monika Olsson, Sviatlana Mefodieva P216. The making of Thai WEEE policy: what can be the role of EPR? Panate Manomaivibool P217. Territorial approach for WEEE management system Bahers Jean-Baptiste P218. Environmental benefits analysis of wastewater treatment Qiong-hua Zhang, Xiao-chang Wang P219. Modeling the Economic and Environmental Performance of Recycling Systems Elsa Olivetti, Jeffrey Dahmus, Susan Fredholm, Jeremy Gregory, Randolph Kirchain P220. Establishing of Joint Eco Factory Development and Training Platform for Managing Problems in End-Of-Life Materials Sustainable
Posters Re-Use Petri Peltonen
Policy instruments Nani Pajunen, Helena Mälkki
P221. Technical and economical aspects concerning the management of electronic waste Paula C. Oliveira, Filipa Charters Taborda, Marta Cabral, Fernanda Margarido, Carlos Nogueira
P240. Assessing and Optimizing Feed Environmental Impacts for Finishing Beef Calves in Portugal Ricardo Teixeira, Ana Simões, Oriana Rodrigues, Tiago Domingos
P222. From Paradigm to Policy: The extent to which the WEEE Directive has fulfilled the objectives of Sustainable Development Mark Dempsey, Lauren Basson, Kirstie McIntyre
P241. Economic and Environmental Assessment of Sown Biodiverse Pastures Ricardo Teixeira, Tiago Domingos
P223. End-of-Life Management: The Role of Consumers Vered Doctori Blass P224. The Value of Information for Product End-ofLife Management Vered Doctori Blass, Roland Geyer P225. Information exchange on substances in electrical and electronic equipment for safe and efficient end-of-life treatment Magnus Bengtsson, Chika Aoki, Shiko Hayashi, Yasuhiko Hotta, Yoshiaki Totoki P226. Transboundary Movement of End-of-Life Electrical and Electronic Equipment for Reuse and Recycling Atsushi Terazono, Aya Yoshida Sustainable Consumption P227. Quantifying the Potential of Secondary Mass Savings in Vehicle Mass Reduction Catarina Bjelkengren, Jeffrey B. Dahmus, Theresa M. Lee, Richard Roth, Randolph E. Kirchain P228. Diet trade and land use. The Social Ecology of the food system. Case study olive oil Arnim Scheidel P229. Who is afraid of Sustainable Consumption? Renate Huebner P230. Organic food consumption and its determinants: Czech case study Jan Urban, Iva Zverinova, Milan Scasny P231. System Analysis of Sustainable Artisanal Fisheries Case Study in Abang Island of Batam Indonesia. Jayadi Kamrasyid, Apendi Arsyad
P242. Integrating forest carbon modeling and life cycle assessment to evaluate harvested woodbased fuels Jon McKechnie, Yimin Zhang, Steve Colombo, Heather MacLean P243. How to assess social sustainability of renewable energies? Gudrun Lettmayer P244. Climate Change and its Impact on Nepalese Agriculture Bhandari Govinda P245. APIX-SEP Zero-Waste Zero-Carbon Business Model Hariharan PV P246. Lignocellulosic biomass-to-electricity systems for Portugal: Life cycle energy and environmental benefits Joao Miguel Nunes, Fausto Freire P247. Indicators for sustainable water management in retail parks Ramon Farreny, Jordi Oliver-Solà, Joan Rieradevall, Ademir P. Barbassa, Bernardo Teixeira, Xavier Gabarrell P248. Dynamic CGE model for sustainable resource management: a case of biofuels Satoshi Kojima P249. Climate change implications of bioethanol production considering additional nitrogen fertilizer application and soil organic carbon Kyo Suh, Ryan Barker, Sangwon Suh P250. Potentiality of soil to reclaim Hg contaminated aquatic environment Jatindra Nath Bhakta, Yukihiro Munekage
P232. Sustainability assessment of diesel and agrodiesel including social aspects Mario Sedlak, Dan Jakubowicz, Petra Bußwald
P251. Bio-fertilizer recipe: Eco-growing towards sustainability in the palm oil industry Wanida Wanichpongpan, Shabbir H. Gheewala, Masayuki Sagisaka
P233. Paradigm Found: Use-oriented Industrial Ecology André Reichel
P252. Community management of resources - A case study from Meghalaya India Anamika Barua, Kitrphar Tongper
P234. Criteria for preliminary assessment and precautionary design of engineered nano materials Arnim von Gleich, Christian Pade, Michael Steinfeldt
P253. Resource Management Implications of a Large-scale Organic Dairy in the U.S.: A Life-Cycle Perspective Greg Keoleian, Martin Heller, Sarah Cashman, Keri Dick, Derek Przybylo, William Walter
P235. A difference of the way of thinking for sustainability and the influence of the environmental news Yagita Hiroshi, Sakairi Satoshi, Sata Tatsuya, Sakai Yasutomo P236. Food choices: A model for sustainability Anne Sibbel Sustainable Resource Management P237. Studies on Competitive Interaction and Management of Wild Oats (Avena Fatua L.) in Spring Wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) Imtiaz khan, Gul Hassan, Muhammad Ishfaq Khan P238. Working with environmental issues in SMEs – Microteaching as a method to overcome barriers Monika Olsson P239. Sustainable production - Environmental Policies Legislation and Incentive-based Economic
P254. Minnesota biogas potential: An environmental and regulatory assessment Brian Walseth, Yiwen Chiu, Junghan Bae, Sangwon Suh P255. Consequential Life Cycle Assessment of cellulosic ethanol production in the US Midwest state of Minnesota Junghan Bae, Ryan Barker, Kyo Suh P256. Life Cycle Analysis as a tool to assess agriculture sustainability Tatiana Valada, Tiago Domingos P257. Life Cycle Analysis of bioethanol production and use Tatiana Valada, Ricardo Teixeira, Tiago Domingos P258. Life cycle assessment of an integrated biofuels production system in Brazil Simone Pereira de Souza, Sergio Almeida Pacca,
Claudinei Andreoli, Márcio Turra de Ávila P259. Extended life cycle modelling addressing direct and indirect consequences: the palm oil biodiesel chain Érica Geraldes Castanheira, Fausto Freire P260. Life cycle assessment of two alternative biomass-to-hydrogen pathways for transportation in Portugal Ana Coelho, João Nunes, Fausto Freire P261. Building-Scale Alternative Energy: A Comparative Analysis for the Ontario Case David Bristow, Chris Kennedy Visions on new IE-based paradigms toward Sustainability P262. Prospects for bio-industrialism: the Brazilian sugarcane ethanol sector Peter Wells, Thaisa Faro Wells P263. Modeling the Sustainability of Wood-Based Bio-refinery and its Supply Chains Anthony Halog P264. Images of Sustainable Development in the Dutch Agriculture System PJ Beers, Frans Hermans, Hanna Schösler, Joost Vervoort, Dirk van Apeldoorn P265. The Environmental Loans and Debts of Taiwan Chia-Wei Chao, Ming-Lung Hung, Hwong-Wen MA P266. The Social Embeddedness of Industrial Ecology Jennifer Howard-Grenville, Frank Boons P267. Chemical Industry as Complex Networks Junming Zhu P268. Economics of Industrial Symbiosis Gabriel Grant
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Conference Venue Important Conference Information
Conference Venue Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation Address: Avenida de Berna, 45 A 1067-001 Lisboa Telephone: +351 21 7823000 Fax: +351 21 7823021 www.gulbenkian.pt
The Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation is a Portuguese private institution of public utility whose statutory aims are in the fields of arts, charity, education and science. Created by a clause in Calouste Sarkis Gulbenkian’s will, the Foundation’s statutes were approved in 1956. The head-office is located in Lisboa. The large premises, opened in 1969, comprise the head-office itself and the museum. In addition to the areas occupied by the Foundation’s management and various departments, the premises include a large auditorium, a space for temporary exhibitions, a congress area with auditoriums and other rooms, as well as a large building that 24 houses the Calouste Gulbenkian Museum and the Art
Library. The entire complex is set in the Gulbenkian Park. In 1983, the Modern Art Centre, consisting of a museum and an education centre, was opened at one end of the park. The Instituto Gulbenkian de Ciência is situated inside a multi-building complex in Oeiras. The Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation also has a delegation in the United Kingdom (UK Branch) and a centre in Paris (the Calouste Gulbenkian Cultural Centre). The Foundation actively pursues its statutory aims in Portugal and abroad through a wide range of direct activities and grants supporting projects and programmes.
Important Conference Information BADGE A badge is required for admittance at all official Conference sessions and poster area, the opening ceremony and Conference dinners. Each participant is asked to present the badge in order to gain access to the Conference. The badge must be clearly displayed.
POSTER SESSIONS Poster sessions are planned for: Sunday, 21 June 16:00 – 18:00 Tuesday, 23 June 15:50 – 18:00
CONFERENCE BAG The Conference Bag, containing the conference material (include USB Pen with Abstracts), can be obtained at the registration counter presenting the conference badge.
CONFERENCE WEB SITE For up-to-date information regarding the Conference, please visit the Conference website at www.isie2009. com
CONFERENCE DINNERS All the participants in the Conference are invited to the Conference Dinners, during the following evenings: Sunday, 21 June – Typical Dinner at “Páteo Alfacinha” Monday, 22 June – Dinner at “Convento de Mafra” Tuesday, 23 June – Closing Dinner at “Palácio Foz” There will be transportation available from the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation (conference venue) and the venues for the conference dinners and from the venues to the official hotels.
LANGUAGE The official Conference language is English. There will be no simultaneous translation. LIABILITY AND INSURANCE The Conference organizer can not accept liability for personal injury, loss of or damaged to belongings of Conference participants, either during or as a result of the Conference. Please check the validity of your insurance. SMOKING POLICY The Conference Venue is a non-smoking area.
Social Programme Accompanying Person Programme 21 JUNE 2009
23 JUNE 2009
PÁTEO ALFACINHA – TYPICAL DINNER “And because love means sharing, Páteo Alfacinha stands for it: the true sharing of this city, Lisbon, made of simple but quite unique things with all those who want to honour us with their visit” Vitor Seijo
PALÁCIO FOZ – CLOSING DINNER
Pateos remind us of a particular moment in Lisbon’s history. From the 1860’s to 1880’s , working people flooded into the capital looking for a better life. Colorful ceramics, iron balconies, bridging staircases blend harmoniously. You may catch Portuguese music at an evening of Fado or old Lisbon marches, or traditional games; and the best of Portuguese food and wines, cheeses, hams and other tributes with the good flavors of old times, far from skyscrapers and shopping centers. In Páteo Alfacinha you make contact with Lisbon of hundred years ago. It is waiting for you. 22 JUNE 2009 CONVENTO DE MAFRA – DINNER
The sheer magnificence of the monumental architectural design of the palace, convent and basilica of Mafra bears witness to the opulence of the court of king João V (1707-1750). It was king João V who ordered the building of what proved to be the defining landmark of the Portuguese Baroque era. The design was by Frederico Ludovice who incorporated an architectural language and style Italian in inspiration. The summer residence of the royal family, the Palace includes various collections featuring works by mainly Portuguese, Italian and French artists working to royal order including Baroque painting and sculpture, religious vestments and ornaments and mural paintings by leading Portuguese artists including Cirilo Volkmar Machado and Domingos Sequeira.
Foz Palace is one of the great surviving palaces in the city, and is located right in the city center, at Praca dos Restauradores. Built between the XVIII and the XIX centuries, it was home of counts, marquis and other noblemen, stage of intense social life with its richly decorated interiors. With the uprise of hard-working tradesmen, and decline of hard-spending nobility, the late Marquês da Foz was forced to literally sell-out all the furnishings of the palace in 1901, in a much attended auction. According to the records of the time, only 25 the walls were not for sale. The palace itself was then mortgaged, and finally sold in 1910 to a rich tradesman immigrated in Brasil. Up to 1939, time when the State finally took over it, the palace sadly worked as working grounds for people of various origins and professions, who rented space there. In 1944 large restoration started taking course, which produced what we see today. Accompanying Person Programme The 3 dinners of the Social Programme are included in the registration fee of Accompanying Person. A programme of excursions will also be available for interested companions. Please ask at the Conference Secretariat for further information.
About Lisboa
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Lisboa’s location, spread over seven low hills, overlooking the river Tejo, once lured traders and settlers, and continues to be a stunning site. Add to that the cultural diversity, a pleasantly temperate climate all year-round and a people that by longstanding tradition offer visitors a warm welcome. Medieval Alfama is the charming and oldest part of the city with its maze-like streets, crowned by the impressive Castelo de São Jorge. The Baixa’s commercial avenues lies just below. The elegant Chiado shopping area climbs away up another hill, next to Bairro Alto, home of much of the Lisbon nightlife. The westernmost part of the city, Belém, was the birthplace of the Age of Discoveries and Parque das Nações (the 98 World Expo site) in the northeast side of the city is an area full of 21st century avant-garde architecture built on a most impressive river side site. A VERY BRIEF HISTORY… Lisboa dates back to pre-Roman times - legend has it that Ulysses founded the city, although it was more probably the Phoenicians. In its early years Lisbon was
a constant battleground with Phoenicians, Greeks and Carthaginians taking turn to rule the city. In 714 the powerful Moors arrived and, by fortifying the city, held out against Christian attacks for over 400 years. By 1147 the Moors’ luck turned and the Christian Cruzaders recaptured Lisbon. The 16th century was Portugal’s short-lived golden era of sea exploration when riches were brought from across the oceans. In the late 17th century the discovery of gold in Brazil saw Lisbon enjoy another luxurious period but this time it was cut short by the massive earthquake in 1755 which reduced the city to rubble. In 1910 the monarchy fell and the first Portuguese Republic was proclaimed. Portugal’s democratic phase lasted until 1926, when a military coup reduced Portugal to a period of totalitarian regime under the dictator António Salazar. The costly colonial wars in 60`s and 70`s within African Portuguese territories, led to the “Carnation Revolution”, a nearly bloodless military coup on 25 April 1974. The new government instituted democratic reforms and granted independence to the African colonies in 1975. In 1986 Portugal became a full member of the European Union.
Lisboa General Information Acessibility Lisboa Airport* (Portela) is located close to the city centre (7 km), about 15-20 minutes transfer to most of the centrally located hotels as well as to the Lisboa Congress Centre. The Airport is served by daily direct flights operated by the traditional air lines as well as by many of the low cost companies operating in Europe. *) Lisboa Airport is not connected to the Underground System (Metro). Public Transportation The joint fleet of the two public transportation companies Carris (buses and trams) and Metro (underground) covers the entire city with regular bus and tram routes as well as underground lines. Taxis The city is served by 3,500 taxis, and a taxi ride from the airport to the city centre should cost between € 8 and € 15. The usual urban taxi fares are: Day: 2.00 € + 0.40 €/km Telephone booking: 0.80 € Night, weekend and holidays: 2.50 € + 0.48 €/km Taxis are widely used by the locals, and in comparison to the taxi fares in other countries, the Lisboa taxis are still to be considered a rather inexpensive means of transportation. Climate The average maximum daily temperature and average minimum temperature in the Lisboa area in June are 25ºC (high) and 15ºC (low). Please take in consideration that Lisboa is located by the river and the ocean, and therefore can be windy in the late afternoon or evening. A sweater or a ladies pashmina may be necessary. Currency Portugal is a member of the European Monetary System, and the previous currency Escudo was replaced by the €uro on 1 January 2002. Electric Current Portuguese standard is the European type 2 pin sockets with 220 volts AC at 50 cycles. The phase 380 volt current is normally available in meeting rooms and exhibition halls. Exchange Major credit cards are accepted in most hotels, shops and restaurants. Travellers’ cheques and currency can be changed at exchange bureaux or at hotel receptions. Automatic changing and cash dispensing machines linked to international networks are also widely available.
Health Requirements With the exception of vaccination certificates for persons coming from areas where yellow fever is endemic, at the present there are no special health requirements. Hotel Check in/out Policy Normal check in time at hotels is 15h00. The established check out time is 12h00. Should you need guaranteed occupancy before 13h00 on the day of your arrival, the previous night should be reserved. Medical Care Clinics and hospitals provide 24 hrs emergency service. The national emergency phone number is 112. Hotels have a doctor on call through the reception. Reciprocal E.C. cover is available at out-patient departments, otherwise private consultation fees are charged. Sales Tax Sales tax (VAT) is included in prices quoted. For non E.U. residents, tax free shopping schemes are available in many shops, which give substantial savings to visitors. Shopping Fine leather goods, lead crystal ware, porcelain, vintage wines, golden and silver filigree, pottery and textiles are considered excellent buys in Portugal. The pedestrian streets of the city centre, “a Baixa”, bordered by the magnificent Praça do Comércio, facing the River Tejo, and the “Chiado” area leading to Bairro Alto, are popular shopping areas. Shops are open from 09h00 to 13h00 and 15h00 to 19h00 Monday to Friday, and 09h00 to 13h00 on Saturdays. Major shopping malls stay open from 10h00 to 23h00, including weekends. The main shopping centres are Colombo, Amoreiras, Vasco da Gama and the Atrium Saldanha, all within easy access by underground network (metro). Smoking The Portuguese law, in accordance with Regulations in force in the majority of European Countries and the USA, does not allow smoking in any public transportation or in any closed public areas. (Some restaurants, bars and discotecs may have a designated smoking area). Tipping Tipping is optional, but adding 10% to the amount is regular practise in taxis, restaurants and bars.
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Local Transportation Information
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Lisboa is easy to get to. It is a short flight away from most European cities, and is just as easily accessible by road, railway or sea. By Rail Scores of national and international trains arrive in Lisboa every day. In addition to Santa Apolónia terminal station, the city now has the new Gare do Oriente, which opened in 1998 adjacent to the Parque das Nações. Both stations have direct bus or underground connections to the city centre.
CARRIS BUSES: nºs. 5, 8, 22, 44, 45, 83; TAXIS: available right outside the Arrival and Departure halls. Taxi Voucher Service at the Lisbon Airport –This service is available to passengers arriving at Lisbon Airport who wish to travel by taxi. The service operates with vouchers on sale at the Turismo de Lisboa counter, located in the terminal. Useful contacts at the Airport
By Air Lisboa International Airport, 7 km from the city centre, has daily flights to and from the major cities in Europe and the world. The Portuguese airlines TAP - Air Portugal and PGA - Portugália Airlines, as well as major international airlines, fly to and from Lisboa. Public Transportation from the Airport to downtown Lisbon: AEROBUS: Linking the Airport to downtown Lisbon and Cais do Sodré (every 20 minutes from 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.);
ANA - AEROPORTOS DE PORTUGAL Aeroporto de Lisboa ADRESS: Rua D Edifício 120 1700-008 LISBOA TEL: + 351 21 841 35 00 / 37 00 FAX:+ 351 21 841 36 75 Information on flight arrival and departure times Tel: + 351 21 841 37 00 www.ana-aeroportos.pt Baggage Claim (lost and found) Tap Air Portugal TEL. + 351 21 841 50 00 Portugália TEL. + 351 21 843 70 00
Lisboa Underground System (METRO)
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Sponsors
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Sponsors
Eco Industrial Solucions Sponsors in part the poster session refreshments held on Tuesday Poster Session 2, from 15:50-18:00
Organization: Graça Pereira (Conference Manager) Instituto Superior TÊcnico Av. Rovisco Pais, 1040-001 Lisboa, Portugal Tel.: +351 21 841 9833 / Fax: +351 21 841 9846 E-Mail: graca.pereira@mitportugal.org
Conference Secretariat: Leading, Congress & Association Management Largo da Lagoa, 15 F 2795-129 Linda-a-Velha, Portugal Tel.: +351 21 771 2636 / Fax: +351 21 771 2639 E-Mail: secretariat@isie2009.com