Footprint of a Time of Flight sensor

Discover the environmental impact of a TOF (Time of Flight)

Climate change

Total impact
35
g CO2-eq.
Or
0.35
km by car
Assuming 100g/km
5 life cycle stages
Raw materials
ST production site
Transport
Use
End-of-life

Hover the section to discover the footprint of each life cycle stage

The use phase and the manufacturing are the major contributors to all the considered impact categories. Together, they represent nearly 80% of all the impacts. The product is considered in an application for a laptop. The estimated positive impact (handprint) on the reduction of the application's footprint is higher than the actual footprint of the product.

Climate change

35
g CO2-eq.
Total impact
Or
0.35
km by car
Assuming 100g/km
The raw materials have a high contribution to all the indicators. It is the second contributing stage for most indicators mainly due to the use of silicon as raw material.

Silicon

86%

Direct materials (BE)

1%

Indirect materials

13%
The ST production site is a significant contributor to all the indicators. For all the indicators except water use, the manufacturing energy consumption and air emissions are the main contributors to the ST production site impact.

Energy consumption (including Renewable Energy)

43%

Air emissions

53%

Solid wastes

0%

Water consumption

4%

Water emissions

0%
The product transportation between ST sites has a negligible impact.
The use stage has a significant contribution of around 50% for most indicators (except water use). However, the impact of the use stage is highly dependent on the type of application. The scenario for this calculation is representative of a chip used in a laptop. The functionality of the chip allows for human presence detection and walk away lock. Automatically switching off the laptop screen can save several tens of kg of CO2 over the life of the laptop. The balance between the handprint and footprint of the product is largely positive.
The end-of-life has a negligible impact. This impact may vary according to how the product will be disposed of.

*This Life-Cycle-Assessment (LCA) results showcase the main footprint contributors for several ST product families. The results should be considered in isolation unless subsequent LCA conditions can be fully replicated. The results are based on the LCA methodology developed by ST and have not been subject to an external critical review process.

Sustainable growth needs

As the development of electronic goods continues to increase, it is imperative to understand the increasingly stringent environment, health and safety product requirements along with opportunities for sustainable production and consumption.ST commitment to eco-design is well established in EHS Decalogue. ST has identified Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) as the most appropriate methodology to calculate products carbon and water footprint and to highlight opportunities for ecological improvements in products design.

What is Life Cycle Assessment?

LCA is an internationally recognized approach that evaluates the potential environmental and human health impact associated with products and services throughout their life cycle, beginning with raw material extraction and including transportation, production, use, and end-of-life treatment. The LCA methodology is defined by ISO standards (ISO 14040, 2006; ISO 14044, 2006).

Objectives, goal and scope

ST has performed several complete LCAs for representative products, in line with ISO standards. Here is presented, as an example, the results pertaining to a product family. The LCA results presented here are limited to the objectives, goal and scope of this communication tool; therefore the aim is not to be comprehensive and only four selected environmental indicators are presented.