A circular
economy — a
concept on the fringes of the zeitgeist a decade ago — is now part of
sustainability discussions throughout the business world. According to a recent
report by
Deloitte and Circle Economy
Foundation (CEF), circularity has reached
megatrend status — with the volume of discussions, reports and articles on the
concept nearly tripling since 2018.
Unfortunately, little conceptual
development
has occurred in circularity since the early 1990s amidst a backdrop of
ballooning global consumerism and stagnated recycling policies and
infrastructure. Deloitte and CEF’s annual Circularity Gap Report, first
published in 2018, introduced the “global circularity metric.” That year, only
9.1 percent of the world economy was circular. In this year’s report, that
number is 7.2 percent.
As Matthew Fraser — Head of Research
and Development at CEF — explained, multiple factors can explain the marked
decrease in global circularity:
-
Greater global consumption over the past five years
-
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A greater share of
materials
are durable goods lasting years and even decades in the global economy,
indicating a decline in economic outputs relative to inputs
-
Global recycling rates remain stagnant.
Since 2018, the Human Development
Index
has risen across high, middle and low-income nations — leading to corresponding
material consumption and material footprint per capita. Since 2018, the report
found that humans have consumed over 500 gigatonnes of material, a whopping 28
percent share of total material consumption since 1900. The report outlines a
roadmap to unlock capital, implement policy, and unlock skills and human capital
needed for a robust circular economy capable of meeting the material challenges
of the Anthropocene.
“As [Human Development Index] rises, so does material consumption — and
consequently, pressure on the environment,” the report reads. “We need a new
economic model for the 21st century: one that maximizes benefits for people and
minimizes the pressure on the planet’s life support systems. This is a circular
economy.”
Characteristics of a circular economy
The 2018 report outlined seven principles of a circular economy:
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Prioritize regenerative resources.
-
Preserve and extend what’s already been made.
-
Use waste as a resource.
-
Rethink business models.
-
Design for the future.
-
Incorporate digital technology to track and optimize resource use.
-
Collaborate through the supply chain to increase transparency and create
shared value.
The 2023 report outlined 16 solutions
that could realign humanity with planetary
boundaries,
reverse planetary
overshoot,
and reduce the need for virgin material extraction. Each solution directly
addresses seven societal needs — nutrition, housing, mobility,
healthcare, communication, consumables and education. The 2023
report found that, assuming business-as-usual continues, the world will consume
170-184 gigatonnes of material annually — but implementing economy-wide circular
solutions could reduce material consumption by one-third.
The latest report builds upon these findings — shifting from theory to action.
It identifies the most impactful circular solutions for industries across three
country profiles and shows how legal, regulatory and financial incentives can be
shifted to unlock durable structural change.
“Today’s world is characterized by a ‘polycrisis’ of overlapping and interlinked
economic, environmental, social and political crises and challenges,”
Dieuwertje Ewalts from Deloitte
Consulting Netherlands told Sustainable Brands® (SB) via email. “We need
systemic transformation to create lasting change — not just treat the symptoms.
A systems-thinking approach to ecological breakdown can help tackle complexity,
deal with uncertainty, balance trade-offs, limit rebound effects, and prevent
embedding biases that can cause future issues.”
Most notably, the report finds that a circular economy must prioritize human and
ecological wellbeing over profits — whereas traditionally, discussions about a
circular economy focused on environmental and economic considerations.
“This report acknowledges the crucial role of people — particularly, key workers
and communities — in driving the transition to a circular economy,” Ewalts
added. “By placing people at the center of the narrative, the report recognizes
that the success of the circular economy transition relies on the engagement,
empowerment and participation of individuals across varying industries and
backgrounds.”
The report’s solutions focus on three key systems —
food,
the built
environment,
and manufactured
goods
— as well as three country profiles: Build (lower-income), Grow
(middle-income), and Shift (higher-income).
“In our report, we selected to look at the manufacturing system for Grow and
Shift countries … due to the fact that consumption of common goods — from
clothing to furniture to cars to electronics — represents one of the
fastest-growing and evolving industries globally,” Fraser told SB. “It is
therefore crucial to consider circularity across the sector — such as
industrial
symbiosis
on the production side, as well as circular business models and extended
producer
responsibility
schemes, on the consumption side.”
“Public officials, financial institutions and multilateral organizations must
reform international financing and trade architectures to ensure all countries
can invest in sustainable development,” Ewalts continued. “For example, they can
increase access to affordable technological innovations and roll out measures
for debt cancellation and relief.”
Global economic incentives including redesigned tax frameworks, disincentivizing
consumption and market interventions that reinforce better pricing must also be
realigned to sustain a circular economy.
“Public officials, multilateral organizations, labor agencies and unions,
business leaders and educational institutions must engage in global
collaboration,” Ewalts said, to ensure a circular transition “is people-centric
— building support and leadership among governments, harnessing policymakers’
creativity, and ensuring education addresses the shift in jobs and skills.”
While an internationally binding plastics
treaty
continues to be debated at the UN, the private sector is proving the
efficacy and importance of circular social
enterprises
— proving that a holistic, inclusive
approach
to building a circular economy is non-negotiable.
“A systems-thinking approach to ecological breakdown can help tackle complexity,
deal with uncertainty, balance trade-offs, limit rebound effects and prevent
embedding
biases
that can cause future issues,” Ewalts wrote.
A systemic approach, she continued, uncovers the root causes of ecological
breakdown as well as identifying leverage points where a small shift can result
in transformational, equitable systems change.
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Christian is a writer, photographer, filmmaker, and outdoor junkie obsessed with the intersectionality between people and planet. He partners with brands and organizations with social and environmental impact at their core, assisting them in telling stories that change the world.
Published Mar 12, 2024 2pm EDT / 11am PDT / 6pm GMT / 7pm CET