Bockale Non-Alcoholic Beer – Carbon Emissions Assessment
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Bockale Non-Alcoholic Beer

Shipment Carbon Emissions Assessment Report
Executive Summary
This report presents a comprehensive carbon footprint analysis of the Bockale non-alcoholic beer shipment, covering 3,725 cases (44,700 cans / 21,143 liters) across four product varieties: Lager, IPA, Sour, and Red Cream Ale.
The total carbon footprint is estimated at 33,149 kg CO2e (33.1 tonnes CO2e), including both product and transportation emissions.
Environmental Impact: This shipment’s carbon footprint is equivalent to approximately 7.2 cars driven for a year. Transportation from Dorval, Quebec to four destinations across Canada accounts for 54% of total emissions.
33.1 Tonnes CO2e Total
7.2 Cars Off Road (1 Year)
44,700 Total Cans (473ml)
84 Pallets Shipped
Emissions by Source Component
Emission Source Total CO2e (kg) % of Total Per Can
Transportation 17,926 54.1% 401g
Aluminum Cans 6,089 18.4% 136g
Brewing & Ingredients 4,567 13.8% 102g
Brewery Energy/Operations 2,283 6.9% 51g
Cardboard Packaging 1,218 3.7% 27g
Other (waste, water) 1,066 3.2% 24g
TOTAL 33,149 100% 742g
Key Insight: Logistics (transportation + packaging) represents 76.1% of total emissions (25,233 kg CO2e), while the actual beer product content is only 23.9% (7,916 kg CO2e).
Transportation Emissions
The shipment originated from Dorval, Quebec and was distributed to four destinations across Canada via truck freight.
Load Destination Pallets Weight (kg) Distance (km) CO2e (kg)
Load 1 North Vancouver, BC 26 25,946 4,580 7,368
Load 2 Abbotsford, BC 19 18,212 4,510 5,092
Load 3 GTA, Ontario 15 13,811 540 462
Load 4 Calgary, AB 24 23,950 3,370 5,004
TOTAL 4 Destinations 84 81,918 17,926
Transportation emissions calculated using 0.062 kg CO2e per tonne-km (medium truck freight factor from Canadian emission standards).
Key Findings
Transportation is the dominant emission source, accounting for 54.1% (17.9 tonnes) of total emissions. Long-haul truck freight to BC destinations drives this impact, with North Vancouver and Abbotsford loads combining for 12.5 tonnes CO2e over 4,500+ km distances.
Aluminum cans are the second-largest contributor at 18.4% (6.1 tonnes). Can production is energy-intensive, generating 136g CO2e per can – more than the actual beer content.
The beer itself is a minor component – brewing, ingredients, and energy combined represent only 20.7% (6.9 tonnes). Recipe differences between lager, IPA, sour, and cream ale are negligible from a carbon perspective.
Logistics dominates at 76% – when you combine transportation (54%), aluminum cans (18%), and cardboard packaging (4%), logistics represents three-quarters of the total footprint while the actual beer product is less than one-quarter.
Opportunities for Reduction
  • Regional distribution strategy: Consolidating loads or using regional warehouses closer to end markets could significantly reduce cross-country transport emissions. The BC shipments alone generated 12.5 tonnes CO2e.
  • Modal shift: Rail freight generates ~30% less emissions per tonne-km than truck freight for long-haul routes like Dorval to BC (4,500+ km)
  • Load optimization: Maximizing truck capacity utilization and coordinating with other shipments reduces per-unit transportation impact
  • Packaging alternatives: Switching to reusable steel kegs (20L) reduces product carbon footprint by up to 86% compared to single-use aluminum cans
  • Increased recycled content: Using higher percentages of recycled aluminum in can production can reduce packaging emissions by 30-50%
  • Renewable energy in brewing: Operations using renewable energy show 15-25% lower product carbon footprints
Methodology & Assumptions
  • Product Carbon Footprint: 0.72 kg CO2e per liter of beer in aluminum cans Source: UK craft brewing study (Bowler et al., 2023) [Link], Italian brewery study (Cimini & Moresi, 2016) [Link], Oregon DEQ literature review [Link]. Mid-range value used as conservative estimate for non-alcoholic beer in 473ml cans.
  • Transportation Emissions: 0.062 kg CO2e per tonne-km for medium truck freight Source: Environment and Climate Change Canada, National Inventory Report 2024, Table A6.1-8 [Link]. Medium truck diesel emission factor for road freight.
  • Packaging Impact: Aluminum cans represent approximately 40% of product carbon footprint Source: Thielmann whitepaper (2021) [Link], Oregon DEQ [Link]. Component breakdown: Cans 40%, Brewing/ingredients 30%, Energy 15%, Cardboard 8%, Other 7%.
  • System Boundary: Cradle-to-gate analysis including raw material production, brewing, packaging, and distribution to destination warehouses. Excludes retail refrigeration, consumer transport, and end-of-life recycling.
  • Non-Alcoholic Beer: Carbon footprint similar to alcoholic beer as fermentation CO2 is biogenic and not counted Source: Oregon DEQ [Link]. Per GHG accounting standards, biogenic CO2 from fermentation is excluded.
  • Data Sources: Peer-reviewed LCA studies on beer carbon footprinting, Canadian GHG emission factors (2024), industry transportation research Bowler et al. (2023) J Cleaner Production; Cimini & Moresi (2016) J Cleaner Production; Oregon DEQ Beer LCA Literature Review (2016); ECCC National Inventory Report 2024; Thielmann packaging whitepaper (2021).
  • Car Equivalency: Based on average passenger vehicle emissions of 4.6 tonnes CO2e per year Source: US EPA Greenhouse Gas Equivalencies Calculator [Link]
  • Reference Standards: ISO 14067 (Carbon Footprint of Products), PAS 2050 methodology, Canadian National Inventory Report emission factors ISO 14067:2018 [Link], PAS 2050 [Link], Canadian NIR [Link]
Uncertainty & Limitations:
  • Product footprint (±20%): LCA studies show wide variation based on brewery size, energy sources, can recycled content
  • Transportation (±10%): Actual routes, vehicle fuel efficiency, load factors may vary from assumptions
  • Component breakdown (±15%): 40/30/15/8/7 split based on literature averages, specific to this shipment may differ
  • Excludes retail/consumer phases which could add 15-25% to total footprint

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