18.09.2025
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5 min read
Key Summary
Environmental Product Declarations (EPDs) are essential tools for understanding the environmental footprint of construction products. Most people focus on the carbon footprint typically measured as Global Warming Potential (GWP) but this is only one of many impact categories reported in an EPD. To design truly sustainable products and make informed material choices, we need to consider all categories, as significant hotspots can also appear in areas like water use, air pollution, or resource depletion.
Think of an EPD like a budget sheet for your product’s environmental footprint. It shows how impacts are distributed across stages such as manufacturing, transportation, use phase, and end of life. But just like in finance, not all “spending” is equal; some materials or processes drive disproportionately high impacts. These hotspots become visible when you analyze the EPD data in detail, and they’re not always where you’d expect. Platforms like Emidat make these hotspots transparent by visualizing impacts across all life cycle stages.
This guide offers a practical lens on how to read an EPD, moving beyond carbon to reveal hidden environmental impacts across a product’s full life cycle.
Focusing only on carbon can lead to blind spots. A product with a low GWP might still have a negative impact on water resources or air quality. To make more informed choices, understanding EPDs means looking beyond GWP to see the full picture. EPDs offer a full-spectrum view of a product’s environmental impact, and seeing that bigger picture is key to truly sustainable design.
These indicators represent the different ‘expense categories’ in your environmental budget*—* each one tells a part of the story.
Takeaway: Low carbon doesn’t always mean low impact. A product can score well on GWP but still have significant effects on acidification, water scarcity, or other environmental pressures.
Here’s what that looks like in practice: this radar chart shows the environmental footprint of a precast concrete element. Despite its moderate carbon footprint (94.20 kg CO₂e/m²), the product shows notable impacts in categories like water depletion, acidification, and fossil fuel depletion.
The chart illustrates why it’s essential to analyze all impact categories, not just CO₂. A product that appears sustainable in one area may still create stress elsewhere in the system.
To support sustainable product design, we must assess the full life cycle, here shown for the A1–A3 stages (raw material extraction and production), and extend the view through to End-of-Life stages for a complete picture.
Product Declaration (EPD), impacts are broken down by life cycle stage, from raw material extraction to end-of-life.
This guide covers typical hotspots across the full life cycle:
In the Emidat platform, the precast concrete element’s impacts are visualized across the entire life cycle — from raw material extraction and production (A1–A3), through transport and construction (A4–A5), use (B), and End-of-Life (C1–C4), and even beyond (D).
While a standard Environmental Product Declaration (EPD) may stop at reporting totals, Emidat provides this stage-by-stage breakdown to reveal where impacts really occur. For precast concrete, as with many cement-based construction materials, most of the footprint is concentrated in the production stages (A1–A3), especially from raw materials and production energy. The construction and use phases (A4–B) have relatively minor contributions, while end-of-life and recycling credits (D) can shift the overall balance.
This breakdown shows that manufacturers primarily influence the material and production phases, but architects and engineers can extend that influence across all stages by making choices about material sourcing, design efficiency, and end-of-life recovery strategies. In the following sections, we’ll look more closely at these hotspots and explore opportunities for reducing impacts throughout the life cycle.
Hotspot drivers and examples
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This stage captures in-use emissions, energy consumption, maintenance needs, and replacement impacts.
While many construction materials have minimal use-phase impacts, some products flip that pattern.For example, electronic systems such as HVAC units or lighting may have comparatively smaller A-stage impacts, but generate significant emissions during use due to electricity consumption or refrigerant leakage. In these cases, the B stages dominate the environmental footprint.
There are also exceptions within construction. Precast concrete components, for instance, may carry relevant B-stage impacts depending on maintenance frequency, repair requirements, or thermal performance over time. These cases are less common but important to consider.
Hotspot drivers and examples:
❗️Note: For many construction materials (e.g. concrete, timber, insulation), B-stage impacts are negligible or zero.
How to reduce:
Hotspot drivers and examples:
How to reduce:
To design truly sustainable products, don’t just track CO₂. Instead, analyze the full environmental budget. Start by targeting the biggest impact drivers, then iterate across all categories. Every decision from materials to transport should support sustainable outcomes across the full footprint.
Want to turn your EPD data into actionable insights? Emidat helps you spot environmental hotspots instantly, from carbon to water use and beyond.