Roadmap towards the Circular Economy in Slovenia

Slovenia
Publication Date
05/2018
Country
Slovenia
Language for original content
Scope

The Roadmap towards the Circular Economy in Slovenia sets the path for Slovenia to become a circular economy front runner in the region. Designed through an inclusive, multi-stakeholder approach, it identifies four priority sectors, give recommendations to the government and identifies best practices. The Roadmap introduces the Circular Triangle, a model which unites three inseparable elements – Circular Economy (business models), Circular Change (government policies) and Circular Culture (citizens), three interdependent aspects that are at the core of systemic change from a linear to a circular economy in Slovenia.

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Public Procurement for a Circular Economy

Public Procurement for a Circular Economy
Type
Author
ICLEI
Publication Date
10/2017
Country
EU
Language for original content
Scope
Ashleigh McLennan

In order to support public purchasers to leverage support for a transition to a circular economy, in October 2017 the European Commission published 'Public Procurement for a Circular Economy'. This brochure contains a range of good practice case studies as well as guidance on integrating circular economy principles into procurement.

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Money Makes The World Go Round

Money Makes The World Go Round
Type
Author
Frido Kraanen
Publication Date
03/2016
Country
EU
Language for original content
Scope
CE100

This report is the result of a collaborative project which was carried out by members of the Circular Economy 100, a program curated by the Ellen MacArthur Foundation. The participants aimed to: (1) understand the implications of a circular economy on the business and financing models of companies; (2) determine how a transition to a circular economy can be supported and accelerated by the financial system; and (3) co-develop and share communication strategies and tools to make the transition clear and tangible to our colleagues, clients, and academics.

C40 is a global network of nearly 100 mayors of the world’s leading cities that are united in action to confront the climate crisis. 

These mayors are committed to cutting their fair share of emissions in half by 2030. Waste and sustainable materials management can help cities reduce 15-20% of their emissions through reduction, avoidance, recycling, treatment and offsetting.

C40 helps mayors to do this by:

  • Raising climate ambition through 1.5°C climate action plan support
  • Building equitable and thriving communities via global and regional programmes
  • Building a global movement through robust international advocacy and diplomacy
  • Scaling up climate action and sharing good practices across high-impact sectors
  • Facilitating access to finance for investment in projects boosting resilience.

 

Making Things Last
Publication Date
02/2016
Country
United Kingdom
Language for original content
Key Area
Scope
Colin MacBean

This strategy sets out Scotlpriorities for moving towards a more circular economy - where products and materials are kept in high value use for as long as possible.

It builds on Scotland's progress in the zero waste and resource efficiency agendas. A more circular economy will benefit:

  • the environment - cutting waste and carbon emissions and reducing reliance on scarce resources;
  • the economy - improving productivity, opening up new markets and improving resilience; and
  • communities - more, lower cost options to access the goods we need with opportunities for social enterprise.

In this strategy, four areas are prioritised: 

  • Food and drink, and the broader bio-economy
  • Remanufacture
  • Construction and the built environment, and
  • Energy infrastructure.
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Circular Business Models for the Built Environment

Circular Business Models for the Built Environment
Type
Author
Guglielmo Carra, Arup
Nitesh Magdani, BAM
Publication Date
03/2017
Country
EU
Language for original content
Key Area
Scope
Contact Person Name (for publication on the website)
CE100

To support the transition to the circular economy, governance, regulations and business models will play a crucial role. More importantly, circular business models (CBMs) would allow the retention of an asset at its highest value over time and support enhancement of natural capital. Different CBMs will be required at different stages of a lifecycle of an asset and may work independently or collaboratively. Successful implementation of these business models will require action from designers, suppliers, service providers, contractors and end-of-life companies by sharing materials, systems, energy, as well as information and services.

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Keeping Customer Connections

Keeping Customer Connections
Type
Author
Anna Vinogradova, Walmart
David Rakowski, PA Consulting
Publication Date
03/2018
Country
United Kingdom
Language for original content
Key Area
Sector
Scope
Stella Chavin

The circular economy offers a new way of looking at the relationships between markets, customers and our use of resources. It uses innovative new business models and designs, disruptive technologies and reverse logistics to transform the current ‘take, make, dispose’ economic model. Circular initiatives work to three principles of designing out waste and pollution, keeping products and materials in use and regenerating natural systems. 

Highlighting that many retailers are already tapping into circular economy thinking, this report is the output of a Collaborative Project carried out by Arizona State University, Cranfield University, eBay, Kingfisher, PA Consulting, Philips, Stuffstr and Wrap.

Country
United Kingdom
Document type
Recipient profiles
Language for original content

The circular economy offers business leaders and government a clear opportunity for long-term growth that is less dependent on cheap materials and energy, and which can restore and regenerate natural capital. This report provides an actionable toolkit for policymakers who wish to embark on a circular economy transformation.

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From waste to resource productivity: evidence and case studies

From waste to resource productivity: evidence and case studies
Type
Author
Government Chief Scientific Adviser
Publication Date
12/2017
Country
United Kingdom
Language for original content
Scope
Dr Richard Leese

All societies produce waste, though its characteristics and what happens to it depend on cultural, economic and political factors at local, national and global scales. New business models, technological innovations and social enterprise have the potential to reduce waste. Policymakers have a key role to play in supporting these efforts by fostering better communication between stakeholders; through regulation that prioritises reuse and quality recycling; and by encouraging resource efficiency through education, research and manufacturing initiatives.

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