Eco-efficiency can become the basis of an environmental decision making framework, towards a
greener economy, by combining the economic welfare with the ecological impact of products. It has
been already highlighted that a potential enhancement to the eco-efficiency of a given system may
also lead to the improvement of its sustainability, if it is successfully linked with resource efficiency
and eco-innovation. Thus, there is the need to develop a set of eco-efficiency indicators, for measuring
the environmental and economic performance of a given system, and, more importantly, to define a
range for each one of them in order to allow better interpretation of the calculated numerical values.
The current paper briefly presents a systemic eco-efficiency assessment methodological framework,
which is then applied to three industrial water use systems, a bottling plant, a textile dyeing industry
and a dairy industrial unit, in an attempt to frame and compare the selected eco-efficiency indicators.
The proposed approach captures the complexity of all interrelated aspects and each studied system
includes the corresponding production chain, the water supply chain and the background system
(energy, raw materials and supplementary resources production processes). The analysis does not
attempt to identify the industry with the best eco-efficiency performance but to reveal the most
important environmental impacts of each system through a relative comparison on eco-efficiency basis
is conducted. It also provides useful insight about the weaknesses of the methodology and suggests
ways to overcome them.
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