Environmental life cycle implications of upscaling lithium-ion battery production
Journal article, 2021

Purpose
Life cycle assessment (LCA) literature evaluating environmental burdens from lithium-ion battery (LIB) production facilities
lacks an understanding of how environmental burdens have changed over time due to a transition to large-scale production. The
purpose of this study is hence to examine the effect of upscaling LIB production using unique life cycle inventory data representative
of large-scale production. A sub-goal of the study is to examine how changes in background datasets affect environmental impacts.

Method

We remodel an often-cited study on small-scale battery production by Ellingsen et al. (2014), representative of
operations in 2010, and couple it to updated Ecoinvent background data. Additionally, we use new inventory data to model
LIB cell production in a large-scale facility representative of the latest technology in LIB production. The cell manufactured
in the small-scale facility is an NMC-1:1:1 (nickel-manganese-cobalt) pouch cell, whereas in the large-scale facility, the cell
produced in an NMC-8:1:1 cylindrical cell. We model production in varying carbon intensity scenarios using recycled and
exclusively primary materials as input options. We assess environmental pollution–related impacts using ReCiPe midpoint
indicators and resource use impacts using the surplus ore method (ReCiPe) and the crustal scarcity indicator.

Results and discussion

Remodelling of the small-scale factory using updated background data showed a 34% increase in
greenhouse gas emissions — linked to updated cobalt sulfate production data. Upscaling production reduced emissions by
nearly 45% in the reference scenario (South Korean energy mix) due to a reduced energy demand in cell production. However,
the emissions reduce by a further 55% if the energy is sourced from a low-carbon intensity source (Swedish energy
mix), shifting almost all burden to upstream supply chain. Regional pollution impacts such as acidification and eutrophication
show similar trends. Toxic emissions also reduce, but unlike other impacts, they were already occurring during mining
and ore processing. Lastly, nickel, cobalt, and lithium use contribute considerably to resource impacts. From a long-term
perspective, copper becomes important from a resource scarcity perspective.

Conclusions

Upscaling LIB production shifts environmental burdens to upstream material extraction and production, irrespective
of the carbon intensity of the energy source. Thus, a key message for the industry and policy makers is that further
reductions in the climate impacts from LIB production are possible, only when the upstream LIB supply chain uses renewable
energy source. An additional message to LCA practitioners is to examine the effect of changing background systems
when evaluating maturing technologies.

Environmental life cycle asssessment

Battery cell production

Upscaling

Electric vehicles

Lithium-ion battery

Author

Mudit Chordia

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Environmental Systems Analysis

Anders Nordelöf

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Environmental Systems Analysis

Linda Ager-Wick Ellingsen

The Institute of Transport Economics (TØI)

International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment

0948-3349 (ISSN) 1614-7502 (eISSN)

Vol. 26 10 2024-2039

Life Cycle Assessment of Large-Scale Lithium-Ion Battery Production and Recycling

Swedish Electromobility Centre, -- .

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Areas of Advance

Transport

Energy

Subject Categories

Other Environmental Engineering

DOI

10.1007/s11367-021-01976-0

More information

Latest update

11/4/2022