| Literature DB >> 30147792 |
Abstract
Material resources exploitation and the pressure on natural ecosystems have raised concerns over potential future resource risks and supply failures worldwide. Interest in the concept of Circular Economy has surged in recent years among policy makers and business actors. An increasing amount of literature touches upon the conceptualisation of Circular Economy, the development of 'circular solutions' and circular business models, and policies for a Circular Economy. However, relevant studies on resource efficiency policies mostly utilise a case-by-case or sector-by-sector approach and do not consider the systemic interdependencies of the underlying operational policy framework. In this contribution, a mapping of the existing resource policy framework in the European Union (EU) is undertaken, and used as a basis for identifying policy areas that have been less prominent in influencing material resource efficiency. Employing a life cycle approach, policies affecting material efficiency in the production and consumption stages of a product have been found to be poorly utilised so far in the EU. Taking this as a point of departure, three policy areas that can contribute to closing material loops and increasing resource efficiency are thoroughly discussed and their application challenges are highlighted. The three policy areas are: (1) policies for reuse, repair and remanufacturing; (2) green public procurement and innovation procurement; and (3) policies for improving secondary materials markets. Finally, a potential policy mix, including policy instruments from the three mentioned policy areas-together with policy mixing principles-is presented to outline a possible pathway for transitioning to Circular Economy policy making.Entities:
Keywords: Circular Economy; Policy; Resource efficiency
Year: 2017 PMID: 30147792 PMCID: PMC6086285 DOI: 10.1007/s11625-017-0502-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sustain Sci ISSN: 1862-4057 Impact factor: 6.367
Fig. 1EU policy landscape. 1 Value Added Tax; 2 Best Available Techniques; 3 BAT Reference documents; 4 Product Environmental Footprint; 5 Product-Service System; 6 Green Public Procurement; 7 Public Procurement
Policies affecting resource efficiency in different life cycle stages of a product, at EU-28 level
| Life cycle stage | Production | Use/consumption | Waste management |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mandatory | (Batteries and waste batteries Directive 2013/56/EU) | (Labelling of energy-related products Directive 2010/30/EU) | Waste Framework Directive 2008/98/EC |
| Voluntary | (Public procurement Directive 2014/24/EU) | (Public procurement Directive 2014/24/EU) |
Policies in parenthesis have only partial or indirect effect on CE
aThe ecodesign directive and REACH regulation serve as a policy framework out of which specific implementing measures are formulated and applied by case (product group or chemical compound respectively). To date, the application of ecodesign focused primarily on energy efficiency measures and material resource efficiency appears very limited (for an overview of ecodesign processes in relation to material resource efficiency see Bundgaard et al. 2017)
Fig. 2Timeline of EU resource-related strategies
New policy approaches in EU Member States promoting the Circular Economy
| Member State | Policy measure | Application |
|---|---|---|
| France | Act on consumption and preventing planned product obsolescence | Mandatory |
| Spain | Reuse targets for Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) | Mandatory |
| Sweden | Value Added Tax (VAT) reduction in repair services | Mandatory |
| Sweden | Public procurement of refurbished ICT equipment by Swedish municipalities | Voluntary |
Fig. 3Influence of reuse, repair, and remanufacturing policies on a product life cycle
Fig. 4Influence of public procurement for resource efficiency on a product life cycle
Fig. 5Influence of waste market-related and EPR policies on a product life cycle
Fig. 6Influence of the three individual policy areas on a product life cycle
Fig. 7Influence of the policy mix of the three policy areas on a product life cycle