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Carbon Footprint across the Coffee Supply Chain: The Case of Costa Rican Coffee
26
Citations
4
References
2013
Year
EngineeringAgricultural Supply ChainsAgricultural EconomicsSustainable DevelopmentCarbon AccountingEnvironmental EconomicsSustainable Supply Chain ManagementCarbon Emission TradingSupply ChainSustainable SourcingEnvironmental FootprintCosta RicaEmission ReductionCosta Rican CoffeeCarbon EmissionsBusinessLife Cycle AssessmentSustainabilitySustainable ProductionCoffee Supply Chain
The issue of carbon emissions has been on the corporate sustainability agenda for some years. For those working in agricultural supply chains, the challenges remain significant, given the diverse direct and indirect emissions occurring throughout the value chain. This study determines the carbon footprint of the supply chain of Costa Rican coffee exported to Europe, using best practice methodology to calculate greenhouse gas emissions. Overall, it was found that the total carbon footprint across the entire supply chain is 4.82 kg CO2e kg -1 green coffee. The carbon footprint of the processes in Costa Rica to produce 1 km of green coffee is 1.77 kg CO2e. The processes within Europe generate 3.05 kg CO2e kg -1 green coffee. This carbon footprint is considered as very high intensity. This paper also identifies the sources of the most intense emission and discusses mitigation possibilities on which efforts must be focused.
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