What happens to resource efficiency, recycling and waste management in a world where disownership is becoming the new normal?
As much as it may seem that the nuts and bolts of resource and waste
management is about sorting machinery, storage, bins and collection
systems, it is really ultimately about people.
We know that if people are to use resources mindfully, to manage them
well, and to both demand and correctly use appropriate end of life
systems, then we need to design systems that they are easy and
convenient to use.
There are two ‘muscles’ that can be flexed in relation to resource and waste management – the Circular Economy muscle, and the Access Economy muscle. A lot of muscle-building effort has gone into the former, and the latter is a muscle we’ve only just discovered we can build.
The Circular Economy
is a concept and model which has been around for some time now, but is
increasingly gaining traction – the UK’s leading waste & recycling
organisation, WRAP UK have recently rebranded themselves as ‘Circular Economy and Resource Efficiency Experts’.
The Circular Economy
seeks to shift activity from a linear to a circular model by making
better use of materials, by keeping materials in circulation through
reuse and recycling, industrial symbiosis and other efforts to divert
material from landfill.
It displaces some demand for new materials, but does not address the
rate at which materials enter the circle, as evidenced by total material
demand continuing to grow faster than recycling rates improve.
It is vital to maintain a focus on bending the Linear Economy (‘take-make-waste’) into a Circular Economy, but it is not enough.
There is an entire, parallel area of territory yet to be explored, which I will call The Access Economy (aka Sharing Economy, Collaborative Economy) – or being able to access what we need by better using what we already have.
The Access Economy seeks to minimise the demand for
materials, and is as – if not more – significant than The Circular
Economy. There are also overlaps between the two eg. reuse could be
considered Circular and Access.
The rapidly-gaining momentum of the collaborative (aka sharing)
economy holds huge potential for addressing how we consume resources,
and ways it could result in less waste.
The Access Economy is focused not on managing material at
end-of-life, of better managing ‘waste’. It is focused on designing
systems that facilitate more efficient, cost effective and in many case,
community-enhancing ways of enabling people to meet their needs by
tapping what is already available and leveraging idle assets (be they
stuff, time, space, skills).
This means looking at the design of our living systems – how we grow
food and prepare it; how we clothe and transport ourselves; how we meet
our daily needs. We need to look at how we can solve the pain points of
people’s lives – cost of living, time poverty –in a way that also
delivers on environmental objectives.
The systems for The Access Economy are different from those for The Circular Economy – and significantly they may be more appealing to people who don’t see themselves as ‘green’, or really care about recycling.
Successfully meeting sustainability challenges means we need to stop
focusing on ‘reducing’ and ‘managing’ energy, emissions, water, waste
and everything else (which are symptoms, outcomes of how people live)
and start looking our systems through a lens of design (not just physical design) and social innovation.
Ultimately, environmental organisations and programs are not really
about ‘environment’ at all – they are social innovation, because they
set out to create new patterns of behaviour among human beings in order
to lessen our impacts on the ecological systems which sustain all life.
And social innovation is a design process.
We are now far from the traditional, familiar territory of the
Circular Economy, but into an exciting new realm we have scarcely begun
to explore that is fast gathering momentum around the world.
What would we be capable of if we combined the existing strength of
the Circular Economy with the emerging juggernaut of the Access Economy?
Further references:
Circular Economy – Ellen Macarthur Foundation – a
series of articles about the circular economy model, its principles,
related schools of thought, and an overview of circular economy news
from around the world.
Shareable – an award-winning nonprofit news, action and connection hub for the sharing transformation.
OuiShare – a
global community empowering citizens, public institutions and companies
to build a society based on collaboration, openness and sharing.
Collaborative Consumption – comprehensive
online resource for collaborative consumption worldwide and network for
the global community, curating news, content, events, jobs, studies and
resources from key media outlets and industry blogs, as well as
original content.
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Originally published in 2014 on cruxcatalyst.com
Header image: Matthew Perkins, Flickr
The post The Circular Economy and The Access Economy appeared first on P2P Foundation.
