Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Ellen MacArthur Foundation - Higher Education

This link contains well researched reports on the greater concept of the Circular Economy.

Ellen MacArthur Foundation: Higher Education resources:

HE Resources


Original post:
http://www.ellenmacarthurfoundation.org/higher_education/global_campus/global-campus-resources



  • www.ellenmacarthurfoundation.org › Global Campus

    Below we have selected a small number of resources for use and/or adaptation in your lectures, ... economy-focused work so we can share emerging practice across the Global Campus community. .... http://www.roundview.org/learn/training ...

  • For related resources, Design for Disassembly, Eco-Design, Environment and AD Technology guidelines related to this can be downloaded for free at:

    Wednesday, May 7, 2014

    Trashed the Film, from GeneraCycle

    Trashed the Film, from GeneraCycle

    Original post at:
    http://www.generacycle.com/trashed-the-film


    Trashed the Film

    Thanks to all those that joined us on Earth Day, Monday April 22nd 2013 at 7PM in Toronto for a screening of Trashed the Film, by Bleinheim Films.
    The event was great and 100% landfill free of course. We wouldn’t have it any other way!
    More on the film:
    Jeremy Irons stands on a beach beside the ancient Lebanese city of Sidon. Above him towers a mountain of rubbish-a pullulating eyesore of medical waste, household trash, toxic fluids and dead animals-the result of thirty years of consumption by just one small city out of how many in the world? As the day’s new consignments are tipped on top, debris tumbles off the side and into the blue of the Mediterranean. Surrounded by a vast reach of plastic bottles, a forlorn Jeremy Irons stares at the horizon. “Appalling,” he mutters.
    In the docu-feature TRASHED, a Blenheim Films production, produced and directed by British filmmaker Candida Brady (Madam and the Dying Swan), which was selected to receive a Special Screening at the Cannes Film Festival, Irons sets out to discover the extent and effects of the global waste problem, as he travels around the world to beautiful destinations tainted by pollution. This is a meticulous, brave investigative journey that takes Irons (and us) from scepticism to sorrow and from horror to hope. Brady’s narrative is vividly propelled by an original score created by Academy Award winning composer Vangelis.
    1. TRASHED trailer (2012) - Environmental documentary ... - YouTube

      www.youtube.com/watch?v=7UM73CEvwMY3 May 2012 - 2 min - Uploaded by TrashedFilm
      Trashed - No Place For Waste with the participation of Jeremy Irons, looks at the risks to the ...

    For related resources, Design for Disassembly, Eco-Design, Environment and AD Technology guidelines related to this can be downloaded for free at:

    Wednesday, April 30, 2014

    DESSO: Cradle to Cradle

    Stef Kranendijk, DESSO, Cradle to Cradle


    Original post:
    http://www.emg-csr.com/blog/implementing-cradle-to-cradle/



    For related resources, Design for Disassembly, Eco-Design, Environment and AD Technology guidelines related to this can be downloaded for free at:
    Sustainable business framework for growth



    circular economy model cradle to cradle image
    “EMG has shown how it’s possible to underpin the idea of sustainability with real substance. Its team has created a true example of environmental excellence and hence our commitment to it.” Stef Kranendijk, CEO DESSO, a Cradle to Cradle company

    What is the circular economy / sustainable business framework?

    In short, the circular economy (or closed loop) is a generic term for an industrial economy where materials flow in continuous cycles: either a biological cycle (via composting) or a technical cycle, where materials retain their high quality for the manufacturing of new (upgraded) products over and over again. Essentially eliminating the concept of waste, it’s the opposite of the linear process of ‘take, make, dispose’. As in life, the aim is to generate energy only from renewable sources.


    Why does this make business sense?

    As finite resources become increasingly scarce, the price of new materials will have more and more effect on the business bottom line. Businesses that are able to innovate their processes to take back what they sell and keep their materials in closed loops are able to turn material scarcity into a significant competitive advantage. To put a figure to it, 2014 research presented at the World Economic Forum estimated that the circular economy could generate USD 1 trillion a year for the global economy by 2025, and create 100,000 new jobs.


    What is Cradle to Cradle?

    Cradle to Cradle is the circular economy model developed by American architect Bill McDonough and German scientist Michael Braungart (MBDC). The core belief is that product manufacturing can be a positive force for society, the economy, and the planet, and it encompasses standards far beyond ‘just’ the circular economy model with regard to water usage, social fairness, the protection of ecosystems and the maximum phase-out of toxic materials.


    Case in point: DESSO

    In 2007, Stef Kranendijk was appointed new CEO of Dutch carpet manufacturer DESSO following the management buyout from Armstrong World Industries. Inspired by the philosophy and business potential of Cradle to Cradle he set out on a mission to change the way the business had run for almost 80 years, indeed raising the standards of the entire industry. EMG worked together with DESSO on their successful journey right from the start.

    Services included:
    • Stakeholder and customer engagement assessment and analysis
    • Development and full integration of CSR into the corporate communications strategy
    • Corporate reputation management
    • Employee engagement, training and corporate events
    • Cradle to Cradle communications and product promotion
    • CSR reports and Annual reports
    • GRI reporting
    The work of EMG was rewarded by the following international recognition:
    • Leadership Award – Leadership in Ethical and Environmental Responsibility, Communitas Awards
    • Best of Category Award – Green Marketing, Summit International Marketing Effectiveness Awards
    • Platinum Award – Category Environmental, MarCom Awards
    The success of DESSO’s transition has been phenomenal. Today, DESSO is an exemplar organisation for successful C2C implementation, promoted at the World Economic Forum in Davos and a business case at London Business School. Media attention has been spectacular and DESSO is frequently recognized as one of most sustainable and innovative companies in the country. Most importantly, market share increased everywhere and profitability (EBIT) went up from less than 1% in 2006 to 3% in 2007, 4.5% in 2008, almost 6% in 2009, and 9% in 2010 – straight through the crisis. DESSO has now taken things to another new level, following their recent acquisition of the larger Enia Carpet.

    Cradle to Cradle Case study, Circular economy case study Desso


    For related resources, Design for Disassembly, Eco-Design, Environment and AD Technology guidelines related to this can be downloaded for free at:
    http://www.activedisassembly.com/strategy/ncyClicke

    Tuesday, April 29, 2014

    Recycle Smarter than a Third Grader!

    We often associate recycling with curbside pickup operated by the local municipality. But can it possibly be a better environmental option for every recycled component picked up? It's true, many items are worth recycling from environmental perspective. And typically, environmental impact and costs correlate with each other most of the time due to the nature of energy.

    Daniel Benjamin is a scholar at PERC. You can watch and read about his research below.


    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hdV3zxoe8aA

    For related resources, Design for Disassembly, Eco-Design, Environment and AD Technology guidelines related to this can be downloaded for free at:

    Recycle Smarter than a Third Grader! | Learn Liberty - YouTube

    www.youtube.com/watch?v=hdV3zxoe8aA9 Apr 2014 - 4 min - Uploaded by Learn Liberty
    Reduce! Reuse! Recycle! All right? Maybe — maybe not, says scholar Daniel K. Benjamin ...

    http://www.learnliberty.org/videos/recycle-smarter-than-a-third-grader/?utm_source=Video+Viewers&utm_medium=video+annotation&utm_content=Recycle+Smarter+Than+A+Third+Grader!+|+YT+Learn+More&utm_campaign=+General

    OR

    http://perc.org/articles/recycle-smarter-third-grader-learn-liberty

    Daniel K. Benjamin: I’ve got a Kleenex in my hand — which is now a used Kleenex — and I’ve got to decide: should I put it in the trash, or should I recycle it? I’m going to put it in the trash. I’ve also got an aluminum beverage can here — which is now an empty aluminum beverage can — and again I’ve got the same choice: into the trash, or into the recycle bin? I’m gonna recycle it.
    My name’s Dan Benjamin and I’ve been studying recycling since the 1980s, both as a college professor and as a senior fellow at PERC, in Bozeman, Montana. So why did I make the choice that I made with that piece of paper? If I had thrown it into the recycle bin, turning that piece of paper into new paper would have used up an enormous amount of resources and would have conferred very little environmental benefits. Hence, because I like to protect the environment and conserve resources, I put it in the trash.
    With the can, on the other hand, by recycling it, when that can gets turned into a fresh new aluminum can, 95 percent of the energy used to make aluminum cans will have been saved, and as a result of that, I will have protected the environment and conserved resources. So, for me, the choice was easy: recycle that can.
    Now you’ve probably always been told: recycling always conserves resources, that italways protects the environment. Which probably started with your third-grade teacher, is generally wrong.
    Now, it is true that with large-scale industrial processes — for example, making frozen pizza or making aluminum cans — the firms recycle all the scraps that happen along the way of the production process. The pizza company takes the scrap dough, puts it back in the next mix, the aluminum company takes the scrap, puts it back into the next batch of aluminum. It conserves resources to do this, and it protects the environment.
    It’s even true that for large household items such as refrigerators, stoves, microwaves, dishwashers, there’s enough recoverable material in there so that it conserves resources and protects the environment to recycle those items.
    But what applies to refrigerators doesn’t necessarily apply to ordinary household trash — the sort of stuff that I was tossing in these bins here. How can you decide what to recycle? Well, here’s an experiment — I’ve done it myself — you can try it. The night before your trash is due to be picked up, put some items out by the trash can with a sign on them that says “free.” Try it with a bag of aluminum cans, a bag of plastic bottles, a bag of glass, a bag of paper. You might even put out there a lamp that no longer works or a small appliance like a toaster oven that doesn’t work.
    Then, the next morning, go out there and see what’s still out there in the alley. During the night, someone has come through the alley, and without any direction from you, they’ve figured out, they know that given current market conditions and where you’re located, what makes sense to recycle and what doesn’t.
    Now, however this experiment works out in your community, I’ll ask you to do one thing: whatever you find out, be sure you pass it on to your third-grade teacher.
    If you’d like to learn more, please click here. You can read my policy series called Recycling Myths Revisited. Now you’ll have a choice: either read the paper version or the electronic version. The advantage of reading the paper version is that it increases the demand for trees and so more trees will be planted. On the other hand, if you use the electronic version, then you won’t have to make the tough choice: should I put it in the trash, or should I recycle it?

    Monday, April 28, 2014

    Updates this week


    Here are the latest updates on the Circular Economy, April 25, 2014.

    For related resources, Design for Disassembly, Eco-Design, Environment and AD Technology guidelines related to this can be downloaded for free at:



    "circular economy"
    Weekly update  April 25, 2014
    NEWS
    EurActiv
    Circular economy advances in France
    As part of the energy transition, a circular economy will be one of the four areas in which Ségolène Royal will concentrate future legislation.
    Google PlusFacebookTwitterFlag as irrelevant
    Granta Design to Join Circular Economy 100 (CE100) Programme
    circular economy is one that is restorative by intention; aims to rely on renewable energy; minimises the use of toxic chemicals; and eradicates waste ...
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    Non-Status-Quo Economy
    ... Collaborative Economy, Restorative Economy, Responsible Economy, Steady-state Economy, Circular Economy, Natural Capitalism, Sustainable ...
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    The realpolitik behind China's renewables
    And the more that China's renewables and Circular Economy initiatives bear fruit, the stronger can we expect to see its advocacy of carbon-neutral ...
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    WEB
    Granta Design join the Circular Economy 100
    Granta Design today announced that the company is joining the Circular Economy 100 (CE100) programme. This group of leading companies, ...
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    For related resources, Design for Disassembly, Eco-Design, Environment and AD Technology guidelines related to this can be downloaded for free at:

    Thursday, April 24, 2014

    Philips' SENSEO Up coffee maker small in size but big in recycled plastics



    Original Post:
    http://www.theguardian.com/sustainable-business/design-challenge-philips-senseo-coffee-recycled-plastics


    For related resources, Design for Disassembly, Eco-Design, Environment and AD Technology guidelines related to this can be downloaded for free at:

    Philips' SENSEO Up coffee maker small in size but big in recycled plastics

    With high recycled plastic content and other sustainability credentials, the new coffee machine is part of a large-scale initiative to incorporate recycled plastics into product design
    A cup of coffee
    Brewing one cup at a time in single our double households could prevent waste. Photograph: Getty
    In 2008, Philips Consumer Lifestyle started working on a series of projects aimed at closing the materials loop. An important focus in these projects was to incorporate the use of recycled plastics in product design. Besides the obvious environmental benefits, recycled plastics involve lower production costs than virgin plastics. Our initial approach was to use recycled plastic in existing products and parts. This had its limitations, however, as recycled plastics have slightly different properties to the virgin plastics for which the products and parts were originally designed.
    So in designing SENSEO Up – our first one-cup coffee machine aimed at single or double households – we decided to change this approach and challenge our designers to specify recycled plastics right from the start of the design process.
    The SENSEO Up designers had to contend with a couple of challenges. The first was a question of aesthetics. Recycled plastics are only available in dark colours, but not a real deep black. You can also see spots in the plastic and sometimes flow lines where the material was injected into the mould. We overcame this problem by using a different architecture built around an internal frame that is not visible to the end user. This frame is made of 40% reinforced polypropylene, a plastic used in many household appliances.
    The second design challenge was to introduce recycled plastics in the baseplate of the SENSEO Up. First, we textured the part to give the recycled plastic a high-quality look and feel. Then we used one matte black colour for the complete range instead of many colour variations. And thirdly, we made the baseplate less visible by focusing attention on the coloured housing above it. This approach allowed us to introduce a 90% recycled Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene (ABS) plastic from post consumer electronic waste into the baseplate.
    SENSEO UpSENSEO Up coffee maker Photograph: Philips
    Internal frame of the product (not visible in this picture) is made of 40% reinforced polypropylene, a plastic used in many household appliances. The baseplate of the coffee machine is made of 90% ABS plastic coming from post-consumer electronic waste.
    Although technical restraints mean we cannot yet use recycled plastics in coloured parts or in parts that come into contact with food, the design of SENSEO Up shows that recycled plastics can be successfully introduced into other applications. By designing the new SENSEO Up from scratch for the use of recycled plastics, we succeeded in launching it with a total of 13% recycled plastics.
    The SENSEO Up has other important environmental benefits besides the use of recycled plastics. As it is a one-cup coffee machine, it is smaller than a two-cup model and three times smaller than the previous SENSEO model, SENSEO Twist, which was launched in 2012. Not only does the compact size mean that it will fit in even the smallest kitchens, but it also needs less packaging and will cause fewer emissions during transport. The SENSEO Up also has reduced energy consumption. The new interface allows users to start the machine, warm up, brew coffee and shut down at just one touch of a button. This means that SENSEO Up goes to off mode immediately after the coffee is brewed, resulting in 10% energy saving compared to other SENSEO machines shutting off automatically.
    Designing the SENSEO Up for recycled plastics has not only created a great new product, but has also allowed us to take a tangible next step towards a circular economy. By using recycled plastics in our products, we hope to create a market for high-quality recycled plastics that allows recyclers to invest in better technologies, resulting in improved recycling of all our products. The SENSEO Up is part of a bigger initiative on recycled plastics, in which we aim to use 3500 tons of recycled plastics in 2015. We hope that many companies will join us on our journey towards recycled plastics, so that together we can have a lasting impact on the way products are designed and recycled in a circular economy.
    Content on this page is produced and controlled by Philips, supporter of the circular economy hub

    For related resources, Design for Disassembly, Eco-Design, Environment and AD Technology guidelines related to this can be downloaded for free at: