LCA Coffee
LCA Coffee
LCA Coffee
In 2018, Nespresso commissioned Quantis, a leading consulting firm specialized in sustainability, to perform a
life cycle assessment (LCA) of a cup of lungo coffee (110 ml) made from various coffee systems, at home, in
Switzerland. This study examined the life cycle of a cup of coffee from the extraction and processing of all raw
materials through the end-of-life of all components, including packaging (a cradle-to-grave approach). The
study assessed the impact of a lungo cup of coffee prepared using the Nespresso Original system in Switzerland
compared with three other coffee preparation systems commonly found in the Swiss market: a moka, a drip
filter and a full-automat system.
In the framework of this study, a specific scenario has been established for Nespresso Headquarters (HQ) in
order to adapt the final comparative LCA results to the European market (made of 17 countries of interest).
The present document summarizes the LCA adaptation made for the European market; it describes the main
assumptions and conclusions applicable to the market.
The results show that for all coffee systems, impacts are systematically dominated by the use stage – the
preparation of the coffee at home – followed by the green coffee supply stage, which encompasses coffee
production in the country of origin and its transportation to the manufacturing sites of Nespresso.
The conclusions of this LCA adaptation for the European market are in line with the main conclusions of the
baseline study for the Swiss market: considering the scenarios studied for the different coffee systems, the
Nespresso Original, the drip filter and the moka coffee systems all have a similar carbon footprint, and the full
automat system has a higher carbon footprint than the 3 other systems.
To follow the requirements of the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) 14040/ 14044 standards
for a comparative assertion and public disclosure, this LCA adaptation for the European market of Nespresso
as well as the baseline comparative LCA study have been peer-reviewed by three independent experts.
Over 30 years ago, Nespresso revolutionized coffee culture with its invention of a compact portioned coffee
system for easy at-home use.
Today people are increasingly concerned with the environmental impact of portioned coffee capsules. More
and more, people question the use of resources in the production process and the impacts of the capsule
packaging after usage. With the evolution of the brand and product range over the last three decades,
Nespresso has taken various steps to improve its environmental performance. Among other initiatives,
Nespresso introduced its own recycling system in 1991 and worked to improve the energy efficiency of its
machines.
To identify key focus areas to further improve its environmental performance, Nespresso Headquarters
commissioned Quantis to carry out an adaptation for the European market of the Life Cycle Assessment (LCA)
of a lungo cup of coffee (110 ml) made and consumed in Switzerland. The current adaptation aims to respond
to two key questions:
1) What is the impact of the Nespresso preparation system on the environment in Europe?
2) How does it compare to alternative coffee preparation systems used in Europe?
1.1 Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) – what is it?
In order to assess the impact of a product on the environment, its entire life cycle must be considered. This is
because the environmental impact of a product goes beyond the use or consumption of that product. The life
cycle of a product is defined by the production, distribution, use and end-of-life (usually disposal) stages. The
life cycle assessment quantifies the environmental impacts related to all the raw materials used to
manufacture, distribute, use and treat the product at the end of its life. The life cycle assessment considers
various indicators to assess different environmental impacts such as carbon footprint, water footprint, or
impacts on biodiversity.
Using the life cycle assessment methodology, it is also possible to compare different products, considering the
same unit of reference for all systems compared and all life cycle stages. One product may perform worse at a
stage visible to the consumer, but at another stage it may perform significantly better for the environment
than comparable products, often leading to unexpected conclusions.
The present LCA adaptation to European market and the initial LCA report conform to the International
Organization for Standardization (ISO) 14040/ 14044 standards for a comparative assertion and public
disclosure and have been peer-reviewed by independent experts from EMPA, Topten International Services
and the EPFL. Its results are representative of the year 2019.
It is important to note that LCA does not quantify the exact impacts of a product or service due to data
availability and modelling challenges. However, LCA allows a scientifically based estimation of the
environmental impacts a system might cause over its typical life cycle, by quantifying (within the current
scientific limitations) the likely emissions produced and resources consumed.
This study adaptation assesses the life cycle of a lungo cup of coffee (110 ml) prepared and consumed at home,
in Europe. The lungo coffee of 110 ml is a very well represented format on the European market and
worldwide. The study included the extraction of all raw materials and coffee cultivation through the end-of-
life of all components, including packaging. The study is carried out for the Nespresso Original coffee
preparation system, as well as three other coffee systems commonly found in Europe: drip filter, moka and full
automat.
Due to a lack of data availability related to green coffee cultivation and delivery for all systems, the coffee
systems are being compared considering the same green coffee cultivation and delivery - partly based on
primary data from Nespresso and also following data outlined in the Draft PEFCR coffee.
Coffee is consumed differently in every household. Some people like to drink coffee in the morning, others in
the afternoon and others rather irregularly. In order to achieve comparable results, the study assumes an
average drinking habit of 2 cups of lungo coffee per day at home. For all coffee systems compared in the
current study, a preparation of a 110 ml lungo cup of coffee was assumed, except for the moka coffee system,
for which a volume of 100 ml is considered (moka coffee makers are only available in multiples of 50 ml sizes).
Full Automat
Coffee prepared using a full automat coffee system, with the full automat machine most commonly sold on
the Swiss market that is kept for this adaptation; the brand being also well represented in Europe: Delonghi
Ecam 21.117.W/B/SB Magnifica S.
A full automat coffee system can produce various types of coffee fully automatically according to the espresso
method. The machine grinds the coffee beans according to the desired grinding degree and weighs them
according to the selected product. The heated water is pressed under pressure through the coffee powder.
Drip Filter
Coffee prepared using a drip filter coffee machine, with an average drip filter model with heating plate and
glass container following data outlined in the Draft PEFCR coffee average machine.
A drip filter machine pours water into a paper filter filled with coffee grounds. The water flows through the
ground coffee, dripping into a container placed under the filter. The filter prevents the coffee powder from
getting into the coffee.
To determine the environmental impact of the Nespresso preparation system, fully automatic machines, moka
and filter coffee, the study considers different stages of the coffee product life cycle.
PACKAGING PRODUCTION
OVERHEADS / SUPPORT & DELIVERY
Nespresso Global HQ Primary packaging
Market Head Office Secondary packaging
Market call center Tertiary packaging
Market after sales center Packaging delivery
MANUFACTURING
1
Land use change includes every change in the use of a land. It can be a change from e.g., grassland to an arable crop, from an arable crop to another
arable crop or to a perennial, or from a primary or secondary forest to arable or perennial crop (i.e., deforestation). Deforestation is the permanent
destruction of forests in order to make the land available for other uses. This is the main contributor to the impacts from land use change. The amount
of land transformed over the last 20 years for the different countries of coffee origin and from forest or grassland to perennial cropland (coffee
cultivation) is based on FAOstat data and taken from the direct land use change assessment tool developed for GHG protocol by Blonk Consultants.
It corresponds to statistical land use change per crop and per country and not to specific farming practices.
Tables summarizing the main data changes from the baseline study to this European market adaptation are
presented at the end of this document.
The life cycle assessment of a lungo cup of coffee studies the contribution of the life cycle stages for various
environmental impacts: carbon footprint, non-renewable resources consumption, land use (i.e. how much land
is needed for cultivation or for buildings to process the coffee), impacts on ecosystem quality (measuring the
effects on biodiversity), human health impacts (measuring the indirect effect on human health from the whole
coffee system) and finally, water consumption (throughout the whole lifecycle, not just in the use phase). A
detailed interpretation of the carbon footprint indicators is performed hereafter as this indicator is well known
and understood, and it is of importance for Nespresso as they have targets on this indicator. The conclusions
for the others indicators are in line with the conclusions for carbon footprint.
120
End-of-life
100
Climate change (g CO2-eq/cup)
Use
80 Distribution
60 Overheads /support
Manufacturing
40
Packaging production
20
Green coffee supply
0
Net impact
NN EU
Figure 2: GHG emissions per life cycle stage for a Nespresso lungo (110 ml) cup of coffee on the European market (NN = Nestlé
Nespresso)
The Nespresso coffee capsule contains 6.1 g of ground coffee to make a lungo (110 ml) cup of coffee.
Considering the coffee grounds in one lungo Nespresso capsule, the green coffee supply accounts for 32% of
the total carbon footprint of a cup of Nespresso coffee. Fertilizer use (14 g CO2-eq) and land use change1 (13 g
CO2-eq) are the largest contributors of greenhouse gas emissions to the green coffee supply. The remaining
emissions are mostly related to the combustion of fossil fuels for field irrigation, the treatment and delivery of
coffee cherries from the farms to the processing sites, and the processing itself. The delivery to the factories
in Switzerland represents 3 g CO2-eq.
The work on coffee sourced through the AAA Sustainability Quality ProgramTM should continue and also focus
on fertilizers and pesticides use reduction keeping the same yield, use of renewable energy for coffee cherries
processing, good coffee pulp management options, etc. despite the fact that these recognized efforts are not
taken into account in the current study.
With 11 g CO2-eq, the primary packaging, i.e., the capsule, is the main contributor to the packaging production
and delivery. The aluminium (1 g) of the Nespresso capsule leads to emissions of 9 g CO2-eq per cup. Recycling
aluminium and providing the market with secondary aluminium enables Nespresso to contribute to reducing
the need to produce more primary aluminium, leading to a net greenhouse gas emissions benefit (included at
the end-of-life stage).
The baseline study for the Swiss market assessed in a sensitivity analysis the influence of using aluminium
produced with 100% renewable electricity. This showed a reduction of the greenhouse gas emissions of 4 g
CO2-eq per cup of coffee.
Nespresso has started implementing recycled aluminium in Original capsules in 2020, aiming at 80% recycled
content in all Original capsules at the end of 2021. Such improvement would lower the greenhouse gas
emissions of the system by 1.5 g CO2-eq per cup of coffee.
3.1.3 Manufacturing
This life cycle stage causes 3% of the carbon footprint (3 g CO2-eq/cup) of a cup of 110 ml Nespresso and
includes the energy, water, gases, building, machinery that are needed for the processing of green coffee into
roast and ground coffee. The wastes generated and their treatment were also considered. The data correspond
to the production center of Avenches, Switzerland (all lungo Original capsules are produced in the Avenches
production center, one of the three manufacturing sites of Nespresso). The carbon footprint score for this life
cycle stage is mostly due to the natural gas consumption, the nitrogen use (to prevent oxidation in the
production line) and the packaging losses (treatment of the packaging scraps).
3.1.4 Distribution
5% of the total greenhouse emissions (6 g CO2-eq/cup) are emitted in the distribution stage (compared to 2 g
CO2-eq in the Swiss study; differences are mainly due to higher distances of transportation, different means of
transportation and the energy consumptions in the average boutiques on the European market). For the
Nespresso capsules on the European market, the distribution can be done either via boutiques (42.8%), via
postal delivery (53.6%) or via pick-up points (3.6%). For the three channels, the transport from the
manufacturing site in Switzerland to the distribution centers in Europe is considered. Then, for the distribution
via boutiques, the transport from the distribution centers to the boutiques was considered, as well as the
impacts of boutique themselves (energy, water and paper consumption, IT equipment, employee-related
activities such as business travels and commuting) and finally the consumer shopping trip. The postal
distribution includes the transport from the distribution centers to the “arrival post”, then the postal delivery
The largest contributor to the carbon footprint of the use stage of a lungo cup of Nespresso coffee is the cup
production and washing (27 g CO2-eq). This is mostly due to the dishwasher electricity requirements to clean
the cup after each use and the allocated part of the dishwasher manufacturing and end-of-life. The second
highest impact on climate change in the use stage for the Nespresso coffee system is the coffee brewing (9 g
CO2-eq). If a consumer’s energy supply at home is based on renewable instead of non-renewable electricity,
this could lead to a 7 g CO2-eq decrease in impact per cup in the coffee brewing stage. The machine production,
distribution and cleaning of the machine is the least impacting factor (8 g CO2-eq), since Inissia is relatively light
(2.4 kg) and therefore consumes few materials, transport and energy.
5% of the total greenhouse gas emissions (5 g CO2-eq/cup) come from the overheads and support stage
(compared to 7 g CO2-eq in the Swiss study; the decrease is mainly due to reduction in business travels or
commuting on average in the other European countries, and decrease in the energy consumption of the
offices). The overheads for Nespresso include the activities related to the global headquarters administrative
center, a weighted average of the European head offices, of the European after sales centers and of the
European call centers. For each of these elements, the system includes the building, electricity, natural gas,
paper and water consumption, the IT equipment, the employees commuting and the business travels. For the
global headquarters, the impacts related to various services (mostly advertising) are assessed through their
economic value and a database linking costs to environmental impacts (these services are responsible for 3 g
CO2-eq/cup).
3.1.7 End-of-life
The end-of-life is a sum of various contribution inducing impacts (e.g. landfilling of coffee ground that
ultimately lead to some release of methane in the atmosphere) or benefits (e.g. recycling of aluminium which
finally avoid primary aluminium production).
The end-of-life of the Nespresso Original capsules (considered to be 38% recycled, 35% incinerated with energy
recovery and 27% landfilled on the average European market) leads to a small greenhouse gas emission net
impact of 0.2 g CO2-eq (compared to a benefit of 5 g CO2-eq in the Swiss study; differences are mainly due to
lower recycling rate of the capsule in Europe and a significant share of the coffee ground going in landfill when
the non-recycled fraction is actually fully incinerated with energy recovery in Switzerland).
This could be turned into an environmental benefit if a higher recycling rate of the capsule could be achieved
and/or if a higher share of the coffee ground could be diverted from landfilling. A 100% recycling rate would
reduce the carbon footprint of the cup of 6 g CO2-eq.
The end-of-life treatment of the secondary and tertiary packaging, of the machine or the cup has only a very
small contribution to the end-of-life greenhouse gas emissions.
160
141 Green coffee supply
140
Climate change (g CO2-eq/cup)
Packaging production
120 108 110
104
Manufacturing
100
Overheads /support
80
60 Distribution
40 Use
20 End-of-life
0 Net impacts
Drip filter
Moka
Nespresso
Full automat
Figure 3: GHG emissions per life cycle stage for the 4 compared coffee systems on the European market.
Based on the studied coffee system carbon footprint, it can be mentioned that Nespresso, drip filter and moka
coffee systems have similar impacts. The full automat coffee system has the highest carbon footprint of all the
systems.
When comparing Nespresso to the drip filter coffee system, it appears they have similar environmental impacts
(due to uncertainties inherent to the climate change indicator, systems with less than 10% difference can be
judged as similar). The drip filter has a slightly higher use stage than the Nespresso system due to the paper
filter and a higher energy consumption during coffee brewing, and it has a slightly higher impact for the green
coffee supply because it is assumed to use more coffee per cup. On the other hand, the Nespresso system has
a higher packaging contribution.
A cup of coffee prepared with the moka system has also a similar carbon footprint as a cup prepared with the
Nespresso Original system. Again, the moka system has higher greenhouse gas emissions than the Nespresso
Finally, the comparison of a cup made from a Nespresso Original capsule with a cup prepared in the full
automat machine assessed, showed a better performance of the Nespresso system regarding greenhouse gas
emissions. This better performance is obtained by a lower amount of coffee per cup and a lighter coffee
machine for the Nespresso system.
The cultivation of coffee has the second greatest influence on the greenhouse gas emissions. All coffee systems
were examined using the same green coffee supply and deforestation model for better comparability across
systems despite a lack of comparative data from other companies (full automat, drip filter and moka can use
a wide variety of coffee, in terms of origin, farming practices, and cherries treatment). The differences
observed among the systems are related to the amount of coffee used per cup only (9 g for the full automat,
6.4 g for the drip filter, 8.5 g for the Moka and 6.1 g for the Nespresso system). The contributors to this life
cycle stage that are described in section 0 above are applicable for all coffee systems as the same green coffee
is used for all.
The coffee pouches (laminate of plastic and aluminium) used for the full automat, drip filter and moka systems
are assumed to be the same for all but the amount of coffee per cup varies. The impact of the Nespresso coffee
system in the packaging stage is higher than for the other three coffee systems (3.5 to 5 times higher). This is
mainly due to the amount of aluminium that is needed to produce the capsules, i.e. the primary packaging, as
well as a slightly higher weight of primary packaging per cup. While the impacts associated to the secondary
and tertiary packaging appear similar for all coffee systems (about 2-3 g CO2-eq), the difference between the
Nespresso coffee system and the other systems is largely driven by the primary packaging.
3.2.3 Manufacturing
The Manufacturing stage contributes to 3% of the total greenhouse gas emissions, and it was modelled using
the same process for all coffee systems. The same process is considered for all systems due to a lack of data
for the full automat, drip filter and moka. Given the wide variety of coffee that can be used for these 3 systems,
the manufacturing could vary. However, as Nespresso uses 100% renewable electricity for its manufacturing,
it was seen as a conservative assumption to consider the same for all systems: this benefits the competitive
systems as their manufacturing does not necessarily use renewable electricity in reality, but it is a safer
approach in the context of this study that compares the environmental impacts of Nespresso with other coffee
systems. The manufacturing impacts are calculated per kg of coffee and therefore the systems have a higher
or lower manufacturing impact depending on the amount of coffee used per serving.
3.2.4 Distribution
This stage emits about 2 to 6 g CO2-eq for all coffee systems. The distribution carbon footprint is driven by the
transport to distribution centers and for distribution centers to post, as well as the boutiques activities for the
Nespresso system, while the transport by truck and the retailer activities explain most of the greenhouse gases
emissions for the distribution of the coffee pouch used for the full automat, the drip filter and the moka
systems.
The use stage has the greatest environmental impact for all examined coffee preparation systems. The cup
production and washing has the largest contribution to the use stage carbon footprint (27 to 29 g CO2-eq per
cup), except for the full automat coffee system where impacts are dominated by the machine production due
to its heavy weight (30 g CO2-eq per cup). Impact caused during brewing represents from 9 to 15 g CO2-eq per
cup, depending on the system considered. For drip filter, the paper filter production and distribution were
also included and represent 4 g CO2-eq per cup. The impact of the water filter production and distribution for
the full automat system and the rubber seal production and distribution of the moka coffee system are low.
The use stage of Nespresso and moka coffee systems lead to similar greenhouse gas emissions, while the use
stages of drip filter and full automat coffee systems are characterized by higher greenhouse gas emissions.
Looking specifically at the coffee brewing related aspects, the moka and drip filter coffee systems are more
impacting due to their larger energy consumption when they are heated. Varying consumer behavior has
further implications on this: for example, brewing with the moka coffee system has an even greater impact if
the consumer uses an oversized heating plate, leading to higher energy consumption than necessary. With the
drip filter coffee system, energy can be wasted if the consumer uses a non-insulated drip filter pot or keeps it
on the warm mode. Nespresso machines have an automatic switch-off/standby function, which helps to
optimize the energy consumption independent of consumer behavior.
The Overheads/support stage contributes to 4 to 5% of the total greenhouse gas emissions, and it was
modelled using the same process for all coffee systems.
Regarding the overheads/support, no evidence could be found on how a specific coffee system could perform
better than another and therefore no differentiation could be made based on this stage.
3.2.7 End-of-life
The end-of-life of the different coffee systems do all lead to net greenhouse gas emission impacts ranging from
0.2 g CO2-eq (Nespresso system) to 2 g CO2-eq (Drip filter and full automat). This impact is mostly explained by
the end-of-life of coffee grounds in landfills which leads to emissions for all coffee systems.
For all indicators, the drip filter, moka and Nespresso systems have a similar performance except for the land
use and water withdrawal for which the moka system is slightly less efficient than the two others due to its
higher amount of coffee per cup. For all indicators, the full automat system studied has higher impacts than
the 3 other systems.
Figure 4: Life cycle stages contribution for the 4 compared coffee systems for all impact indicators on the European market. For each
indicator, all coffee systems were normalized with respect to the NN EU coffee system which impact was set at 100%.
Another element tested is the recycling rate of the Nespresso capsule: with a 100% recycling rate, the climate
change score of the cup of lungo prepared from a Nespresso Original capsule would be reduced by 6 g CO2-
eq, while with 0% recycling, it would increase of 4 g CO2-eq.
4. Conclusion
The holistic view on the life cycle of the four different coffee preparation systems shows that drinking a 110 ml
lungo cup of coffee made from a Nespresso coffee system in Europe has a similar environmental impact as the
same cup of coffee made with a drip filter coffee system or a moka coffee system. On the other hand, preparing
a cup of coffee with a full automat preparation system has a higher environmental impact since the machines
are heavier and a greater amount of coffee is used.
A large part of the impact on the environment is rooted in the coffee preparation at home (cup production
and washing, brewing of the coffee, machine production, distribution and washing), and cultivation of the
green coffee. The environmental impact of coffee consumption increases significantly when consumers do not
dose exactly, throw out left-over coffee, or use machines irresponsibly. Unportioned coffee system
performances are much more dependent on consumer behavior than portioned coffee systems. In other
words, a more responsible consumer could have a lower impact using a drip filter or a moka than the Nespresso
Original coffee system under specific conditions, but a less responsible person could prepare a higher impact
cup of coffee using the drip filter or moka coffee systems compared with the Nespresso Original. Thus, the
Nespresso coffee system appears as a safeguard and stable solution against an environmental un-responsible
use.
The study worked with a variety of data sources. In addition to publicly accessible databases and studies, expert
judgments and measurements from Quantis, primary data were available from Nespresso itself, especially for
the Nespresso preparation system. For the alternative systems, on the other hand, publicly accessible data had
to be used. Furthermore, the study did not investigate the environmental impact of different coffee varieties,
growing regions or cultivation types.
Data for all systems were based on calculations for a standardized coffee that is average in European
comparison. One major source of secondary data was the draft Product Environmental Footprint Category Rule
(PEFCR) for the coffee sector. Product Environmental Footprint (PEF) is a European initiative to establish rules
on how to perform LCA in various sectors, among others the coffee sector. This pilot on coffee stopped during
the process but a draft document has been established and it contains a lot of useful data (PEF coffee Technical
Secretariat, 20162). The pilot stopped because no consensus was found about the labelling/comparison part,
not because of the data. This draft document, including the part on data it contains, has been validated by the
European Commission and the coffee stakeholders.
The electricity mix used for all activities occurring in Europe, including Switzerland, is the ENTSO-E mix
(European Network of Transmission System Operators for Electricity), representing the average electricity mix
consumed in Western Europe through the highly interconnected electric grid. For green coffee cultivation and
treatment, the electricity consumed is based on the electricity mix from the different coffee production
countries.
The packaging production for the Nespresso coffee system is based on primary data from Nespresso. For the
full automat, drip filter and moka coffee systems, the packaging data come from the PEFCR study for coffee
for the composition and on own measurement for the mass.
In this work, environmental impacts are assessed through six indicators corresponding to midpoint and
endpoint level indicators and they are aligned with international guidance on life cycle assessment:
greenhouse gas emissions, non-renewable resources depletion, land use, impact on ecosystem quality, water
withdrawal, and human health.
Quantis compiled the data for each coffee system and evaluated them for the respective environmental
impacts according to defined formulas. This was based on the consumer ritual, i.e. the consumption of two
cups a day, at home in Europe. This assumption and data basis formed the basis for all statements and
comparisons made in the study. If variables such as different types of coffee, machine types or consumer
behavior are changed, this can lead to different results.
It is important to note that LCA does not exactly quantify the real impacts of a product or service due to data
availability and modelling challenges. For the current assessment, the following limitations should be
considered:
• The Nespresso coffee system is modelled with more details and granularity because primary data were
available for this model. As one of the purposes of the study was to understand better the impacts of
the Nespresso coffee system, it was decided to keep all available data on this system, even if it was not
possible to find as detailed data for the comparative systems. This is also the rationale that led to
include life cycle stages with the same impacts for all systems, e.g., the overheads or the cup washing.
• This study adaptation focuses on the European market and the detailed results observed are therefore
true only for this specific market.
2 https://webgate.ec.europa.eu/fpfis/wikis/pages/viewpage.action?spaceKey=EUENVFP&title=Stakeholder+workspace%3A+PEFCR+pilot+Coffee
These limitations of the LCA results do not challenge the main conclusions relative to the defined goal and
scope of the study, as the results still allow the identification of the key environmental parameters and key
differences among scenarios.
The baseline study and adaptation to European market is compliant with ISO 14040/14044 standards and its
methodology, database and results have been critically examined by the following three independent experts,
who found the results to be clear and transparent:
§ Roland Hischier, EMPA (reviewer and chairman of the panel)
§ Hélène Rochat, Topten International Services (reviewer)
§ François Maréchal, EPFL (reviewer)
This report has been prepared by the Lausanne office of Quantis. Please direct all questions regarding this
report to Quantis Lausanne. www.quantis-intl.com
6. Data
Data considered to model Overheads, Distribution and End-of-life is available upon request.
AAA The Nespresso AAA Sustainable Quality™ Program was launched in 2003 with the NGO the
Rainforest Alliance. It is based on internationally recognized social and environmental
sustainability criteria. It fosters long term relationships with farmers, embeds sustainable
practices on farms and the surrounding landscapes, and improves the yield and quality of
harvests. At the same time, it contributes to improve the livelihoods of farmers and their
communities.
ASI Aluminium Stewardship Initiative
Carbon The carbon footprint is a measure of the potential impact on climate change. It takes into
footprint account the capacity of a greenhouse gas to influence radiative forces, expressed in terms of
a reference substance and specified time horizon (100 years). The impact metric is expressed
in kg CO2-eq.
Biogenic CO2 Plants photosynthesis consumes CO2. When released, e.g., when the plant is composted or
incinerated, this CO2 is specified as biogenic CO2. As the quantity released has been before
pumped by the plant, the balance is considered to be neutral. This is true only when the
carbon is released as CO2, but not when it is released as methane that has a higher global
warming potential than CO2.
Distribution The distribution life cycle stage covers the transportation of the production from the
manufacturing site to the consumer.
End of life The end-of-life stage includes the collection and treatment of the different packaging items,
the coffee grounds, the machine and the cup.
ENTSO-E European Network of Transmission System Operators for Electricity
Green coffee The study analyzes the complete coffee cultivation, including agrochemical use, irrigation,
supply possible deforestation, energy and water consumption for coffee cherries processed into
green beans and transport to Europe.
ISO International Organisation for Standardization
LCA Life Cycle Assessment
LCIA Life Cycle Impact Assessment
Manufacturing The manufacturing stage includes the energy, water, gases, building, machinery that are
needed for the processing of green coffee into roast and ground coffee. The wastes generated
and their treatment are also considered.
Net impact The net impacts is the sum of impacts and credits.
NN Nestlé Nespresso
OEF Organisation Environmental Footprint
Overheads/ The overheads for Nespresso include the activities related to the global headquarter
support administrative center, the Swiss market head office, the Swiss after sales centers and the
Swiss call center. The same data are considered for the Overheads/support for all coffee
systems studied.
Packaging The packaging production includes the production of the materials and their forming for the
production & primary, secondary and tertiary packaging. The primary packaging corresponds to the
delivery capsule for the Nespresso coffee system and a laminated pouch of 500 g roast and ground
coffee for the full automat, drip filter and Moka coffee systems. The secondary packaging
corresponds to the sleeve containing 10 capsules for the Nespresso and a carton board tray
containing several pouches for the full automat, drip filter and Moka coffee systems. The
tertiary packaging consists in a corrugated board box, a pallet and an LDPE film for all
systems.
PEF / PEFCR Product Environmental Footprint / Product Environmental Footprint Category Rule
Use The use stage includes the machine production fraction, the cup production, the coffee
brewing (machine use), the machine cleaning and the cup washing. For the drip filter, the
paper filter production and distribution are also included.