Think global act local: The dependency of global lithium-ion battery emissions on production location and material sources
Journal article, 2024

The pursuit of low-carbon transport has significantly increased demand for lithium-ion batteries. However, the rapid increase in battery manufacturing, without adequate consideration of the carbon emissions associated with their production and material demands, poses the threat of shifting the bulk of emissions upstream. In this article, a life cycle assessment (LCA) model is developed to account for the cradle-to-gate carbon footprint of lithium-ion batteries across 26 Chinese provinces, 20 North American locations and 19 countries in Europe and Asia. Analysis of published LCA data reveals significant uncertainty associated with the carbon emissions of key battery materials; their overall contribution to the carbon footprint of a LIB varies by a factor of ca. 4 depending on production route and source. The links between production location and the gate-to-gate carbon footprint of battery manufacturing are explored, with predicted median values ranging between 0.1 and 69.5 kg CO2-eq kWh−1. Leading western-world battery manufacturing locations in the US and Europe, such as Kentucky and Poland are found to have comparable carbon emissions to Chinese rivals, even exceeding the carbon emissions of battery manufacturing in several Chinese provinces. Such resolution on material and energy contributions to the carbon footprint of LIBs is essential to inform policy- and decision-making to minimise the carbon emissions of the battery value chain. Given the current status quo, the global carbon footprint of the lithium-ion battery industry is projected to reach up to 1.0 Gt CO2-eq per year within the next decade. With material supply chain decarbonisation and energy savings in battery manufacturing, a lower estimate of 0.5 Gt CO2-eq per year is possible.

Life cycle assessment

Monte Carlo simulation

Carbon footprint

Battery materials

Battery manufacturing

Author

Evangelos Kallitsis

The Faraday Institution

Imperial College London

Jordan J. Lindsay

Minviro Ltd

Mudit Chordia

Chalmers, Technology Management and Economics, Environmental Systems Analysis

Billy Wu

Imperial College London

The Faraday Institution

Gregory J. Offer

The Faraday Institution

Imperial College London

Jacqueline S. Edge

Imperial College London

The Faraday Institution

Journal of Cleaner Production

0959-6526 (ISSN)

Vol. 449 141725

Subject Categories

Environmental Management

Energy Systems

DOI

10.1016/j.jclepro.2024.141725

More information

Latest update

4/3/2024 8