The built environment consumes 98% of all natural resources
A circular economy in the built environment is essential for bringing consumption of natural resources into balance with the Earth’s productive and regenerative capacity
Developing a circular economy can help us achieve net zero carbon, build climate resilience, address the biodiversity emergency and improve social outcomes
A new paper explains why the built environment must become part of the circular economy. The exciting challenge and opportunity now lies in working out how, writes Eszter Gulacsy.
On 1 June ‘Our shared vision: a circular economy in the built environment’ was launched at the World Circular Economy Forum in Helsinki. The vision is that ultimately every organisation in the built environment value chain plays a part in changing the way resources are used, to establish sustainable balance between the built and natural environments. It emphasises the societal importance of achieving this, as current ‘take-make-waste’ linear economic practices are stressing the natural environment and harming people.
The vision is the product of consultation with more than 120 industry leaders, representing 80 organisations, led by Mott MacDonald strategic advisory director Mark Enzer. It is necessary and timely: The built environment consumes 98% of the 100bn tonnes of resources taken from the natural environment each year. Material extraction has tripled since 1970 and almost doubled since 2000. Despite occupying just 1% of the Earth’s surface, the built environment is responsible for about 25% of land system change. The way buildings and infrastructure are designed, constructed, used and ultimately disposed is causing habitat destruction, water stress, biodiversity loss and climate change.
Circular economy principles involve minimising resource consumption and waste by keeping the materials, products and assets we already have in use for longer – and adapting, recovering and recycling them through multiple lifecycles, ideally for ever. Other sectors have already made considerable progress in changing their use of materials and products. The vision encourages those involved in creating, operating and maintaining the built environment to do so too. And it recognises that the wider circular economy needs the built environment to unleash value.
The vision defines the value of resources in terms of the social, environmental and economic outcomes gained from their use, taking account of negative externalities arising from extraction, manufacturing, use itself, maintenance and disposal. Accounting for the effects of resource use on biodiversity, ecosystem services, climate change and human health should promote resource efficiency and conservation:
Prevention – avoid the need to build by:
Reuse assets in situ and without modification by:
Reuse assets in a new location and/or with modification by:
Recovery and closed-loop recycling - maintain resource value by:
Recovery and open-loop recycling – minimise loss of resource value by:
Reduction spans the whole hierarchy. The quantity of resources cycling through the built environment needs to be carefully managed and minimised. That starts with examination of the socioeconomic demands that drive new construction and expansion of the built environment, includes design, construction, operation and maintenance, and addresses waste generated when assets are in use, resulting from adaptation, and during end-of-life disassembly/recovery/recycling.
Mott MacDonald’s young but fast-growing circular economy business is supported by our executive director responsible for environmental, social, governance (ESG) and sustainability, Denise Bower. “Circular economy thinking is part of systems thinking, which has become steadily more central to the way we and our clients approach challenges and solutions,” she said following the vision’s launch. “Sustainably managing materials in the built environment requires understanding of cause-and-effect relationships, connections between sectors, the whole-life performance of assets and systems, and the outcomes they deliver – and it can help to address many of today’s big, systemic issues, including the climate and biodiversity emergencies.”
Circular economy thinking is part of systems thinking, which has become steadily more central to the way we and our clients approach challenges and solutions.Group external engagement director
The circular economy requires a fundamental rethink of objectives, strategy, planning and delivery, focused on the drivers for circularity: to reduce resource consumption, eliminate waste and regenerate nature – and all contributing to new business opportunities, improved business resilience and ultimately improved outcomes for society.
The circular economy demands collaboration, innovation and entrepreneurship. Right across the built environment value chain, there is much to be gained commercially. And with an intergenerational view of our activities, advancing the circular economy is part of our duty of care.
Our shared vision has been launched to call this to all our attention. It invites us to choose positive change, take collective action, and embrace and learn from globally diverse approaches to developing the circular economy.
Let’s turn the vision into action.
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