Moving Towards the Circular Economy/City Model: Which Tools for Operationalizing This Model?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Circular Economy Model
2.1. What Is a Circular City: An Overview
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- a built environment designed in a modular and flexible way;
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- renewable-energy systems and efficient use of energy;
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- an accessible, economical, clean and effective urban mobility system;
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- recycling and transformation of waste into a resource;
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- production systems that encourage local loops closure and waste minimization.
3. The Need for Tools for Implementing the Circular City
3.1. Methodology
3.2. Indicators Deduced from the Analysis of Circular Cities and Literature
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- Micro-level (Mi)—company level, building level, citizens level;
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- Meso-level (Me)—companies’ network level, eco-industrial park, neighbourhood level, city level;
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- Macro-level (Ma)—regional level, national level, international level.
4. Benefits from Circular Economy Implementation: Empirical Evidence
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- Kalundborg (Denmark);
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- Kawasaki (Japan);
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- Dunkirk (France).
4.1. Empirical Evidence from Kalundborg, Denmark
4.2. Empirical Evidence from Dunkirk, France
4.3. Empirical Evidence from Kawasaki, Japan
5. A Proposal for the Circular City Model Implementation
5.1. The Port in a Circular City: Proposed Indicators
5.1.1. Environmental Impacts of Ports
- (1)
- Air quality
- (2)
- Energy consumption
- (3)
- Noise
- (4)
- Relationships with the community
- (5)
- Ship waste
- (6)
- Port development (land)
- (7)
- Climate change
- (8)
- Water quality
- (9)
- Dredging operation
- (10)
- Garbage/port waste
5.2. Cultural Landscape in Circular City: Proposed Indicators
- (1)
- Autopoietic principle—self-organizing capacity of cultural heritage, that is the ability to renew itself;
- (2)
- Symbiotic principle—relationship of mutual interdependence between the asset and the external context;
- (3)
- Generative principle—capacity of the reused cultural heritage to generate external effects.
5.3. Community Wellbeing and Health in Circular City: Proposed Indicators
5.4. Governance Tools in Circular Cities
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- collaborative governance;
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- adaptive governance;
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- experimental governance;
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- reflexive governance.
5.4.1. Urban Planning in Circular (Port) City
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- “Smart design: commit to smart design of buildings in order to make them more suitable for repurposing and for the reuse of materials;
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- Dismantling and separation: efficient dismantling and separation of waste streams enables high value reuse;
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- High-value recycling: high-value recovery and reuse of materials and components;
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- Marketplace and resource bank: exchanging commodities between market players”.
6. Discussion and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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City—Country | Project Name | |
---|---|---|
1 | London (United Kingdom) | Circular London |
2 | Glasgow (United Kingdom) | Circular Glasgow |
3 | Rotterdam (The Netherlands) | Circular Rotterdam |
4 | Amsterdam (The Netherlands) | Circular Amsterdam |
5 | Paris (France) | Circular Paris |
6 | Antwerp (Belgium) | Antwerp Circular South |
7 | Brussels (Belgium) | Be Circular Be.Brussels |
8 | Maribor (Slovenia) | Roadmap towards the circular economy in Slovenia |
9 | Luibljana (Slovenia) | Roadmap towards the circular economy in Slovenia |
10 | Praga (Czech Republic) | Circular Prague |
11 | Kawasaki (Japan) | Eco-town project |
15 | Kalundborg (Denmark) | Kalundborg Industrial Park |
12 | Marseille (France) | * |
13 | Göteborg (Sweden) | * |
14 | Malmö (Sweden) | * |
Indicator | Unit of Measure | Scale | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Environmental Dimension | |||
Annual amount of greenhouse gas emissions; Annual amount of CO2 emissions; Percentage of reduction of greenhouse gas emissions | %/year or tons/year | Mi–Me–Ma | [21,35,46,47] |
Recycling rate of municipal waste | %/year | Me | [10,45,47] |
Recycling rate of packaging waste | %/year | Me–Ma | [10,47] |
Amount of landfilled waste Percentage of material solid waste landfilled Percentage of household waste ended in landfills | %/year or tons/year | Mi–Me–Ma | [10,35,45,46,47] |
Percentage of material solid waste incinerated | %/year | Me–Ma | [35] |
Percentage of material solid waste composted | %/year | Me–Ma | [35] |
Using of recycled goods in municipal administration | %/year | Me | [46] |
Using of recycled goods in industrial production | %/year | Me–Ma | [46] |
Saving energy due to the use of recycled goods in industrial production | %/year or kWh/year | Mi–Me–Ma | [46] |
Saving water due to the use of recycled goods in industrial production | %/year mc/year | Me–Ma | [46] |
Amount of recycled goods sold | N./month (or year) | Me–Ma | [46] |
Percentage of household waste reused or recycled | %/year | Me–Ma | [46] |
Unsold products recovered every day for redistribution at the market itself or through nearby community facilities | Kg/day | Me–Ma | [46] |
Input (energy, materials) in production processes from renewable sources | ** | Mi–Me–Ma | [48] |
Input in production processes from reused materials | ** | Mi–Me–Ma | [48] |
Input in production processes from recycled materials | ** | Mi–Me–Ma | [48] |
Output from production processes from renewable sources | ** | Mi–Me–Ma | [48] |
Output from production processes from reused materials | ** | Mi–Me–Ma | [48] |
Output from production processes from recycled materials | ** | Mi–Me–Ma | [48] |
Amount of resources saved | ** | Mi–Me–Ma | [20] |
Percentage of water consumption for habitat (reduction for example thanks to harvesting rainwater on the roofs) | %/year | Mi–Me–Ma | [20,35] |
Volume (amount) of resource flow | ** | Me–Ma | [49] |
Amount of recycled resources | ** | Mi–Me–Ma | [49] |
Amount of reused resources | ** | Mi–Me–Ma | [49] |
Percentage of green roofs | %/ total city surface | Mi–Me–Ma | [45] |
Amount of food waste treated Food waste treated in Small and Medium-size Enterprises (SMEs) | %/total food waste | Mi–Me–Ma | [45] |
Percentage of retrofitting interventions on buildings | %/total building | Mi–Me–Ma | [45] |
Percentage of degraded buildings | %/ total building | Me–Ma | [45] |
Public transport usage | % of inhabitants using public transport | Me–Ma | [45] |
Electrical energy consumed in the transport sector | % of transport sector using electrical energy | Me–Ma | [45] |
Synergies among industries | N. | Me–Ma | [45] |
Safe water accessibility (water issues regarding its treatment and distribution) | ** | Me–Ma | [45] |
Water efficiency (water issues regarding its treatment and distribution) | ** | Me–Ma | [45] |
Separated waste (recovery and treatment of waste generated in city) | Kg/year | Me–Ma | [45] |
Percentage of non-renewable energy use | %/year | Mi- Me–Ma | [35] |
Percentage of renewable energy use | % | Mi–Me–Ma | [50] |
Percentage of local nutrient recovery | % | Me–Ma | [50] |
Buildings designed for complete disassembly | N. | Me–Ma | [50] |
Reuse of building components at the end of life | % | Me–Ma | [50] |
Design for flexibility by using modular systems | % | Me–Ma | [50] |
Recycling rate of recyclable materials and constructions | % | Me–Ma | [50] |
Low-impact and non-toxic materials used in production processes | % | Me–Ma | [50] |
Sustainable materials sourced from certified or eco-verified sources | % | Me–Ma | [50] |
Amount of waste heat from industry used for heating the city and horticulture | kWh/year | Mi–Ma–Ma | [25] |
Amount of groundwater warmed in the earth and used to heat homes and offices | Mc/year | Mi–Ma–Ma | [25] |
Number of homes getting their energy (heat and electricity) from biogas (i.e., fermenting the manure of cows) | N./total | Me–Ma | [25] |
Amount of recovered phosphate from the sewage water | Kg/day | Mi–Me–Ma | [25] |
Percentage of reuse or recycling of recyclable demolition materials | % | Mi–Me–Ma | [25] |
Economic and Financial Dimensions | |||
Spending on waste management | €/year | Me–Ma | [47] |
Disposable income of households (reduction through the reduced costs of products and services) | €/year | Me–Ma | [47] |
Revenue from recycled goods sold | €/month €/year | Mi–Me–Ma | [46] |
Potential value of the material after recovery/re-use | € | Mi | [49] |
Circular economy innovation budget (in relation to the number platforms and businesses that lead to innovation in circular economy subjects) | %/year | Mi–Me–Ma | [45] |
Annual cost saving from recover phosphate from the sewage water (precious and scarce fertilizer) | €/year | Mi–Me–Ma | [25] |
Social and Cultural Dimensions | |||
Liveability (e.g., increase through reduction of time lost from congestion, reduction of air pollution, improved waste and wastewater treatment) | ** | Me–Ma | [47] |
Employment opportunities Job creation | N. of jobs | Me–Ma | [20,46,47] |
Number of events and dissemination activities about circular economy | N. of events/year | Me–Ma | [46] |
Participants in events about circular economy (including public bodies, companies, universities, research centres, professional associations, etc.) | N. of participants/year | Me–Ma | [46] |
Active population in circular economy initiatives | % | Me–Ma | [45] |
People involved in the informal waste recycling sector | %/tot. inhabitants | Me–Ma | [35] |
Indicator | Unit of Misure | Scale | City Reference | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Environmental Dimension | ||||||
Amount or percentage of recycled material | Tons/year or %/year | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular London Circular Rotterdam Maribor, Slovenia Luibljana, Slovenia | |||
Amount or percentage of products reused | Tons/year or %/year | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular London Circular Rotterdam Maribor, Slovenia | |||
Amount or percentage of products recovered | Tons/year or %/year | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular Prague Maribor, Slovenia Luibljana, Slovenia | |||
Amount of raw materials used in the manufacturing processes | Tons/year | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular London | |||
Average amount of materials retained in the cycle per citizen per year | Kg/year | Mi–Me–Ma | Antwerp Circular South | |||
Percentage of incoming/outgoing flows | %/year | Me | Circular Paris | |||
Amount of CO2 emissions Amount of greenhouses gases emissions | Kg of CO2/year | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular London Circular Amsterdam Circular Prague Malmö, Sweden | |||
CO2 (or CO2 equivalent) emissions saved (also through industrial and urban symbiosis) GHG emissions saved (for example by an increase in circularity) | Tons/year or T Co2 equivalent /year or %/year | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular London Circular Glasgow Marseille Kalundborg Industrial Symbiosis Circular Prague Malmö, Sweden Gothenburg, Sweden Kawasaki, Japan | |||
Amount of emissions of NOx | Tons/year | Me–Ma | Circular Prague | |||
Amount of emissions of fine dust emissions Annual average air quality particulate matter | Tons/year or PM2.5 µg/m3 | Me–Ma | Circular Prague Circular Rotterdam | |||
Reduction in embodied carbon (building environment chain) | kilograms of CO2e per kilogram of product | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular London | |||
CO2 intensity | tons/capita | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam | |||
Embedded CO2 emissions (“Further research is needed to calculate this indicator” [37]) | tons/capita | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam | |||
Percentage of reduction of emissions due to a smart and clean building logistics (construction sector) | % | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam | |||
Air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions associated to transport | Tons/year | Me–Ma | Circular London | |||
Average amount of products going to landfill or incineration | Tons/year | Me–Ma | Circular London Circular Prague | |||
Waste reduction in production of goods–raw material efficiency | kilograms of waste per €1000 output | Me–Ma | Circular Amsterdam Circular Prague | |||
Amount or percentage of waste separation | %/year or tons/year | Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam Circular Prague | |||
Increase in the clean plastics and drink packaging streams from residual waste | %/year | Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam | |||
Percentage of recycling of the solid waste generated in the city Percentage of recycle of packaging wastePercentage of recycle of municipal waste | %/year | Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam Maribor, Slovenia Luibljana, Slovenia | |||
Amount of construction waste by implementing of interventions related to circular economy | tons/year | Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam | |||
Difference between tonnes of waste and tonnes of products consumed | Tons of waste/tons of products consumed | Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam | |||
Tonnage of waste diverted via repair, reuse, recovery and upcycling activities (recycling centres, artisans, second-hand goods stores, fab labs, etc.) | tons/year | Me -Ma | Circular Paris | |||
Traceability of hazardous waste | ** | Me–Ma | Maribor, Slovenia | |||
Amount of waste produced in the city Amount of waste generated per capita | Tons/year or tons/per capita/year | Me–Ma | Gothenburg, Sweden Circular London Circular Rotterdam | |||
Amount of waste produced in the city and treated within the city itself | tons/year or %/year | Me | Circular Prague | |||
Amount of solid waste reused | Tons/year or %/year | Me–Ma | Maribor, Slovenia Luibljana, Slovenia Circular Glasgow Circular Prague | |||
Amount or percentage of waste avoided Amount of household waste reduced preventing waste and encouraging reuse | Tons/year or %/year | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular London Circular Glasgow Circular Prague Circular Rotterdam Antwerp Circular South Circular Paris Maribor, Slovenia Malmö, Sweden Gothenburg, Sweden | |||
Amount of biowastes processed in biogas facilities | % or tons/year | Me–Ma | Circular Prague | |||
Percentage of reduction of noise of waste collection fleet by a perceived percentage | % | Me–Ma | Circular Prague | |||
Use of renewable resources | %/year | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular Amsterdam Antwerp Circular South Circular Rotterdam Malmö, Sweden | |||
Energy savings per year | %/year | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular Glasgow Circular Paris | |||
Tap water use | %/year | Me–Ma | Antwerp Circular South | |||
Absolute (kWh) and relative (%) reduction of yearly electricity consumption | kWh/year or %/year | Mi–Me–Ma | Antwerp Circular South | |||
Less use of peak power | %/year | Mi–Me–Ma | Antwerp Circular South | |||
Primary resources used Virgin resources used Amount of primary resource use avoided | %/year or Tons/year | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam Malmö, Sweden Circular London Circular Prague Circular Glasgow | |||
Primary raw material demand per capita | ton/capita | Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam | |||
Energy requirement per capita | GJ/person/year | Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam | |||
GDP per energy requirement | €/GJ | Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam | |||
Supply of renewable energy | % | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam | |||
Embedded energy use (“Further research is needed to calculate this indicator” [37]) | ton/capita | Mi | Circular Rotterdam | |||
Amount of material saving due to the implementation of circular strategies | tons | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular Amsterdam | |||
More efficient resource use | ** | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular London | |||
Percentage of renewable or recycled energy use | %/year | Mi–Me–Ma | Malmö, Sweden | |||
Renewable energy production on total energy production | MWh/year/total | Mi–Me–Ma | Malmö, Sweden | |||
Fossil-fuel-free transport sector | % | Me–Ma | Malmö, Sweden | |||
Percentage of renewable electricity supply for all municipal operations | % | Me | Malmö, Sweden | |||
Number of families powered by energy produced by wind turbines | N./total | Me–Ma | Malmö, Sweden | |||
Electricity consumption per capita | MWh per Capita/year | Me–Ma | Malmö, Sweden | |||
Public transit ridership for work and school commutes | % | Me–Ma | Malmö, Sweden | |||
Eco-car strategy–Municipal fleet powered by biogas, hydrogen or electricity (including plug-in hybrids) | %/ year | Me–Ma | Malmö, Sweden | |||
Construction materials come from secondary sources | % | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular Prague | |||
Tonnes of residual materials not utilised (construction sector) | Tons/total | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular Prague | |||
Percentage of building heating mainly by natural gas | % | Me–Ma | Circular Prague | |||
Percentage of building heating mainly by energy from incineration | % | Me–Ma | Circular Prague | |||
Percentage of water heating by natural gas | % | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular Prague | |||
Raw material consumption | %/year | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular Prague | |||
Sq metres that includes facilities and services to develop their circular sustainable projects | Sqm/total surface | Me–Ma | Be circular Be.Brussels | |||
Liters of households daily water-consumption | Liters/day | Me–Ma | Antwerp Circular South | |||
Raw materials with high risk for impact on biodiversity (“Further research is needed to calculate this indicator” [37]) | % | Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam | |||
Percentage of sustainable food | % | Me–Ma | Circular Paris | |||
Maritime traffic (amount of maritime throughput) | Tons/year | Me–Ma | Marseille | |||
Land covered by a circular platform in the industrial port area | Sqm | Me–Ma | Marseille | |||
Percentage of the land area used for circular economy projects implementation | % | Me–Ma | Marseille | |||
Number of plants involved in circular economy projects | N./year | Me–Ma | Marseille | |||
Percentage of biodiversity | % | Me–Ma | Malmö, Sweden | |||
Percentage of annual rainfall absorbed by green roofs | %/year | Me–Ma | Malmö, Sweden | |||
Temperature of external facades (decrease for example thanks to green facades) | °C | Mi | Malmö, Sweden | |||
Indoor temperatures (decrease for example thanks to green facades) | °C | Mi | Malmö, Sweden | |||
Amounts of ground-level ozone recorded near the green facades | ** | Mi | Malmö, Sweden | |||
Creation of protected green areas | N./year | Me–Ma | Malmö, Sweden | |||
Green areas used as stormwater storage | Sqm/total surface | Me–Ma | Malmö, Sweden | |||
Energy consumption referred to transport sector | KWh/year | Me–Ma | Maribor, Slovenia | |||
Proportion of green and recreational areas per capita | % | Me–Ma | Maribor, Slovenia | |||
Percentage of improvement of fuel utilisation compared to a separate production of heat and power | % | Me–Ma | Kalundborg Industrial Symbiosis | |||
Reduction of the total water consumption by recycling water and by letting it circulate between the individual symbiosis partners | % | Me–Ma | Kalundborg Industrial Symbiosis | |||
Amount of ground water substituted by lake water that is processed up to drinking water quality by municipality. Amount of surface water saved | Cubic meters/year | Me–Ma | Kalundborg Industrial Symbiosis | |||
Amount of reduced oil consumption through symbioses | Tons/year | Me–Ma | Kalundborg Industrial Symbiosis | |||
Amount of newspaper/cardboard sold to cardboard and paper consuming industries producing new paper, egg boxes, etc. | Tons/year | Me–Ma | Kalundborg industrial symbiosis | |||
Amount of rubble and concrete used for different surfaces after crushing and sorting | Tons/year | Me–Ma | Kalundborg | |||
Amount of garden/park refuse delivered as soil amelioration in the area | Tons/year | Me–Ma | Kalundborg industrial symbiosis | |||
Amount of bio waste from households and company canteens used in the compost and biogas production | Tons/year | Me–Ma | Kalundborg industrial symbiosis | |||
Amount of iron and metal resold after cleaning for recycling | Tons/year | Me–Ma | Kalundborg industrial symbiosis | |||
Amount of glass and bottles that are sold to producers of new glass | Tons/year | Me–Ma | Kalundborg industrial symbiosis | |||
Amount of resources saved through the industrial symbiosis initiatives | Tons/year | Me–Ma | Kalundborg industrial symbiosis | |||
Number of different resource streams exchanged | N. /year | Me–Ma | Kalundborg Industrial Symbiosis | |||
Climate change adaptation | ** | Me–Ma | Circular Prague | |||
Number of symbioses/synergies connecting businesses (resources exchanged) | N./year | Me–Ma | Kawasaki, Japan Malmö, Sweden | |||
Reduction in the physical value of material use due to industrial and urban symbiosis | % | Me–Ma | Kawasaki, Japan | |||
Economic And Financial Dimensions | ||||||
Money saved (in a year) for average household due to reducing the amount of products thrown away | €/year | Me–Ma | Circular London | |||
Financial savings to both consumers and businesses adopting more efficient circular business models | €/year | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular London | |||
Financial savings to public sector bodies through improved procurement practices/waste management | €/year | Me–Ma | Circular London | |||
Financial savings for consumers from decreased consumption of “new products” | €/year | Me–Ma | Circular London | |||
Waste management costs | €/year | Me–Ma | Circular Glasgow Circular Prague | |||
Budget allocated to stimulate pilot projects that employ circular economy at the local level | €/year | Me | Be circular Be.Brussels | |||
Environmental costs (costs of exhaustion, water pollution, CO2-emissions, toxicity and land use in € per kilogram) | €/kg | Me–Ma | Circular Amsterdam | |||
Gross value added | €/year | Mi | Circular Prague | |||
Return on investment | € | Mi | Circular Prague | |||
Total revenue from sale/leasing of reused products | €/year | Mi | Circular Prague | |||
Economic savings in purchasing reused products for citizens | €/year | Mi | Circular Prague | |||
Resource usage: total raw material productivity | GDP/tons of primary material input | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam | |||
Euros allocated from the municipality to various district heating and district energy projects | €/year | Me | Malmö, Sweden | |||
Sustainability of investments from the municipality | ** | Me | Malmö, Sweden | |||
Average value of products | € | Mi | Circular London | |||
Value of re-usable or recyclable used goods sent to landfill | € | Mi | Circular London | |||
Money granted to businesses or research projects linked to the circular economy | €/year | Me–Ma | Be circular Be.Brussels | |||
Increase in productivity for municipality by organizing the production chains in a circular way | %/year or €/year | Me | Circular Amsterdam | |||
Net added value due to the implementation of circular strategies | €/year | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular Amsterdam | |||
Value creation thanks to the growth of circular economy models | €/year | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular Paris | |||
Volume of sales thanks to the growth of circular economy models | Amount/year or €/year | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular Glasgow | |||
Sales of locally produced goods | Amount/year or €/year | Me–Ma | Circular Glasgow | |||
Revenues through sales thanks to the growth of circular economy models | €/year | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular Glasgow | |||
Change in GDP through circular activities | % | Ma | Circular Rotterdam | |||
Turnover of organizations working in the circular economy (including all sectors and types) | €/year | Mi | Circular Paris | |||
Global sales related to circular economy | %/year | Me–Ma | Marseille | |||
Annual fees related to circular economy | %/year | Me–Ma | Marseille | |||
Tenancy turnover | %/year | Me–Ma | Malmö, Sweden | |||
Costs related to flood risk | €/year | Me–Ma | Malmö, Sweden | |||
Resources productivity | ** | Me–Ma | Maribor, Slovenia | |||
Creating added value and economic growth | €/year | Me–Ma | Maribor, Slovenia Luibljana, Slovenia | |||
Attractiveness in terms of tourist visits | N. of visitors/year | Me–Ma | Maribor, Slovenia Luibljana, Slovenia | |||
Public funding in circular economy projects | €/year | Me–Ma | Gothenburg | |||
Economic advantage from industrial symbiosis activities | €/year | Me–Ma | Kawasaki, Japan | |||
Economic opportunity generating from waste deverted from incinerator and landfill thanks to material exchanges | €/year | Me–Ma | Kawasaki, Japan | |||
Social and Cultural Dimensions | ||||||
Number of new jobs Share of circular jobs (full- or part-time jobs that are related to one of the seven basic principles of circular employment) Percentage of new jobs related to the circular economy Number of new jobs from recycling of packaging Number of new jobs from industrial ecology Number of new green jobs | N./year or %/year | Mi–Me–Ma | Circular London Marseille Circular Amsterdam Circular Rotterdam Circular Paris Circular Glasgow Kalundborg industrial symbiosis Maribor, Slovenia Circular Prague Luibljana, Slovenia Kawasaki, Japan | |||
New business opportunities New businesses that have integrated circularity into their development process | N./year or %/year | Me–Ma | Circular London Marseille Circular Amsterdam Circular Rotterdam Circular Paris Circular Glasgow Kalundborg industrial symbiosis Maribor, Slovenia Circular Prague Luibljana, Slovenia Be circular Be.Brussels | |||
Number of training opportunities related to circular economy | N./year | Me–Ma | Circular London Circular Prague | |||
Unemployment rate | %/year | Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam Maribor, Slovenia Luibljana, Slovenia Malmö, Sweden | |||
Change in circular jobs | % | Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam | |||
Number of employees | N./year | Me–Ma | Kalundborg industrial symbiosis | |||
Number of companies supported in the implementation of circular economy approaches | N./year | Me–Ma | Be circular Be.Brussels | |||
Number of individuals trained through the education measures | N./year | Me–Ma | Be circular Be.Brussels | |||
New collaborations between public agencies and enterprises | N./year | Me–Ma | Be circular Be.Brussels | |||
Number of participants in circular economy processes | N./year | Me–Ma | Be circular Be.Brussels | |||
Public tenders incorporating circular economy and resource efficiency criteria | % | Me–Ma | Be circular Be.Brussels | |||
Number of people using a personal dashboard that display real-time data-flows from smart energy, water and waste bin meters, helping to increase awareness about consumption | N./year | Me–Ma | Antwerp Circular South | |||
Training for employees to think in a circular way | N./year | Me–Ma | Be circular Be.Brussels | |||
Percentage of population that shows an increase in circular behaviour | % | Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam | |||
Annual number of visitors (with active engagement) to the reuse hubs | N./year | Mi | Circular Prague | |||
Social Cohesion (participate objectively) | ** | Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam | |||
Percentage of population that describes their own health as good or very good | %/year | Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam | |||
Population with middle or high education | %/year | Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam | |||
Percentage of population dying from diseases of the respiratory system (diseases of the respiratory system can be an air quality indicator, but also of habits such as smoking) | %/year | Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam | |||
Average household income | €/year | Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam | |||
Population below poverty line | %/year | Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam | |||
Health benefits (how to evaluate this indicator is not specified in the report) | ** | Me–Ma | Circular London | |||
Alleviating food poverty (how to evaluate this indicator is not specified in the report) | ** | Me–Ma | Circular London | |||
Positive community activity (how to evaluate this indicator is not specified in the report) | ** | Me–Ma | Circular London | |||
Physical and mental health benefits (how to evaluate this indicator is not specified in the report) | ** | Me–Ma | Circular London | |||
Number of new circular initiatives | N./year | Me–Ma | Circular Rotterdam | |||
Percentage of residents participated in dialogue and/or design related to circular economy | %/year | Me–Ma | Malmö, Sweden | |||
Number of local “green” companies | N./year | Me–Ma | Malmö, Sweden | |||
City attractiveness in terms of creation of recreational and cultural spaces | ** | Me–Ma | Malmö, Sweden | |||
Development of cooperative economy | ** | Me–Ma | Maribor, Slovenia | |||
Number of new forms of enterprises (SMEs, start-ups, incubators, etc.) | N./year | Me–Ma | Maribor, Slovenia Luibljana, Slovenia | |||
Level of satisfaction of citizens with the administration services | qualitative | Me–Ma | Maribor, Slovenia | |||
Transformation of neighborhoods and local community | ** | Me–Ma | Maribor, Slovenia | |||
Competitiveness of the economy | ** | Me–Ma | Maribor, Slovenia | |||
Competitiveness of the university | ** | Me–Ma | Maribor, Slovenia | |||
Professional and managerial transformation of the city administration | ** | Me–Ma | Maribor, Slovenia | |||
Interaction between residents | ** | Me | Maribor, Slovenia | |||
Number of private partners involved in industrial symbiosis | N./year | Me–Ma | Kalundborg Indusrtial Symbiosis | |||
Number of public partners involved in industrial symbiosis | N./year | Me–Ma | Kalundborg Indusrtial Symbiosis |
Kalundborg, Denmark—Eco-Industrial Park |
---|
First output-input exchanges: 1961 |
Geographical scale of cooperation: Kalundborg |
Nature of eco-industrial transactions: Output-input exchanges: energy, water, and waste materials |
Network members: 8 partners |
Denomination: Kalundborg Symbiosis Centre |
Creation: 1996 |
Founders: Industrial partners and the Kalundborg municipality |
Mission: statement to educate and build new partnerships (encouraging, facilitating, and managing eco-industrial interactions) |
Indicator | Data |
---|---|
Number of partners linked by commercial agreements exchanging output-input (2015) | 8 (7 private industrial companies and the local government of Kalundborg) |
Number of output–input exchanges (n. of symbioses) (2015) | 30 |
Number of different resource streams exchanged | 25 |
Amount of internal resources combined (number) | 5000 |
Annual economies generated from transforming waste into valuable resources and reducing pollution and materials consumption | €80 million/year |
Socio-economic benefits produced every year connecting enterprises | 14 mill /year (Enough to buy 354 brand new electric powered cars) |
Euros saved on the bottom line annually connecting the enterprises | 24 mill/year (Equivalent to having 252 academics employed for a year) |
Annual reduction in CO2 equivalent emissions thanks to the partnerships | 635,000 tons/year |
Environmental impact saving—CO2 after 30 years | 175,000 tons/year |
Environmental impact saving—SO2 after 30 years | 10,200 tons/year |
Water saved thanks to recycling and reuse (2010) | 3 mill m3 |
Amount of gypsum produced from desulfurization of flue gas that replaced natural gypsum | 150,000 tons/year |
Amount of oil consumption yearly reduced thanks to 19 synergies | 20,000 tons/year |
Amount of gypsum consumption reduced thanks to 19 synergies | 200,000 tons/year |
Amount of the water consumption reduced thanks to 19 synergies | 2.9 mill m3/year |
Resource saving—gas after 30 years | 45,000 tons/year |
Resource saving—coil after 30 years | 15,000 tons/year |
Resource saving—water after 30 years | 600,000 m3/year |
Waste reuse—ash for cement industry after 30 years | 130,000 tons/year |
Waste reuse—gypsum for plasterboard products for the construction industry after 30 years | 90,000 tons/year |
Waste reuse—solid biomass used by 600 farms as fertilizer after 30 years | 150,000 m3/year |
Employment (number of jobs) | Gyproc 165 |
Asnaes Powe Station 120 | |
Statoil Refinery 350 | |
RGS90 65 | |
Novo Nordisk Kalundborg 3500 employees | |
Number of employees in Kalundborg Symbiosis | Over 5000 |
Dunkirk, France—Ecopal |
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Network members: 101 members (mostly Small and Medium Enterprises) (in 2016) |
Denomination: Ecopal |
Creation: 2001 |
Founders: Local companies (bottom-up logic) and local public institutions |
Mission: To ensure local sustainable development by promoting the concept of industrial ecology through concrete and fruitful projects |
Indicator | Data |
---|---|
Amount of flows (raw materials, energy, waste, by-products, sludge and sewage, and unavoidable energy) inventoried from 147 companies (from 2007 to 2009) | 5000 |
Amount of opportunities for cooperation affecting 55 companies (number of synergies) | 30 |
Number of enterprises involved in synergies related to reuse of water | 20 |
Number of firms that exchange by-products like scrap, steel slag, refractory bricks, steel mill dust, acid waste, tires, solvents, animal feed and used oil (2018) | 14 |
Euros saved thanks to 60 shared collections every year | 210,000 €/year |
Percentage of saving on waste-management bills for each participant thanks to 60 shared collections every year | 20% |
Money saved from each enterprise annually | 4800 €/year |
CO2 emission avoided thanks to 60 shared collections every year | 45 tons/year |
Amount of CO2 emissions avoided in 10 years | 230 tons |
Amount of industrial residues managed from 60 shared collections every year | 430 tons/year |
Amount of drinking water yearly saved | 130,000 m3/year |
Number of employees (2011) | 57,000 |
Number of industries promoting industrial ecology | Over 200 |
Kawasaki, Japan—Eco-Town |
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Geographical scale of cooperation: Kawasaki |
Nature of ecoindustrial transactions: Output-input exchanges in main industries of steel, electronics, communication, machinery, oils, chemistry, information, service |
Denomination: Kawasaki Eco-Towns |
Creation: 1997 |
Founders: municipality, supported by the Ministry of Environment and the Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry |
Mission: to find a solution to dispose of municipal solid waste in a sustainable way enhancing at the same time local economy |
Indicator | Data |
---|---|
Number of documented symbioses connect steel, cement, chemical, and paper firms and their spin-off recycling businesses | 14 |
Economic advantage from industrial symbiosis activities involving the steel sector | 6.74 mill €/a |
Economic opportunity generating from waste diverted from incinerator and landfill thanks to 7 key material exchanges (565 kt) | 130 million USD/year |
Coal saved thanks to industrial symbiosis activities involving the waste-processing sector | 9.1 kt/a |
Limestone saved thanks to industrial symbiosis activities involving the waste-processing sector | 55 kt/a limestone saved |
Percentage of reduction in CO2 emission due to the reduction of waste and by-products through industrial symbiosis (2017) | 13.8% |
Total carbon emissions reduction through industrial and urban symbioses | 4.26 Mt CO2e |
Amount of waste deverted from incinerator and landfill thanks to 7 key material exchanges | 565 kt |
Reduction in the physical value of material use due to industrial and urban symbioses | 6.4% |
Emergy decresase due to industrial and urban symbioses compared to the case without industrial and urban symbioses | 49% |
N. of workers in Mizue-Town, Kawasaki Ward | About 400 |
Indicator | Unit of Measure | Scale |
---|---|---|
Number of companies/actors involved in symbiotic and synergistic relationships in port area and among port area and city | N./year | Mi–Me |
Number of existing or promoted symbioses and synergies in port area and among port area and the city | N./year | Mi–Me |
Reduction in greenhouse gas emissions thanks to the implementation of symbiotic processes | %/year | Mi–Me |
Percentage (or amount) of recycling in port area (waste oil in heavy oil and fuel, oils and metals from waste water, etc.) | %/year or tons/year | Mi–Me |
Percentage of waste produced in port area to landfill | %/year or tons/year | Mi–Me |
Reduction of the percentage of toxic substances produced in port area | %/year | Me–Ma |
Amount of materials (such as plastic or tires) used as alternative fuel to coal | tons/year | Mi–Me |
Production of thermal energy from the waste heat supplied by the surrounding companies | KJ/year | Mi–Me–Ma |
Energy generated during waste treatment and used to supply electricity to recycling facilities | MWh/year | Mi–Me–Ma |
Grants from the local and national government for symbiosis activities | €/year | Me–Ma |
Direct and indirect new investments generated by activated symbioses | €/year | Me–Ma |
New jobs generated by activated symbioses in port area | N./year | Mi–Me–Ma |
Recycling of non-ferrous metals | tons/year | Me–Ma |
Amount of electricity equivalent to the energy needed by 10,000 homes per year generated by turbines | KW/year | Me–Ma |
Investments in the recycling projects | €/year | Me–Ma |
Waste reduction in production processes | %/year | Me–Ma |
Money saved thanks to the construction of a new biomass cogeneration plant | €/year | Me–Ma |
Awards for companies actively involved in waste reduction | N./year | Me–Ma |
Workshops and events with experts for community awareness | N./year | Me–Ma |
Number of neighborhood associations on 10,000 inhabitants | N./10,000 inhabitants | Me |
Ground water saved through recycling and reuse | Mc/year | Me–Ma |
Surface water saved through industrial symbioses | Mc/year | Me–Ma |
Waste water saved | Mc/year | Me–Ma |
Air Pollutants | Health Effects |
---|---|
Carbon monoxide (CO) | “It is a gas that is readily absorbed from lungs into bloodstream. It attaches more readily to haemoglobin in the blood than oxygen and can cause headaches, dizziness, weakness and aggravate heart conditions” |
Nitrogen dioxide (NO2) | “It is a gas that causes increased susceptibility to infections and asthma. It reduces lung development in children and has been associated with increasingly more serious health effects, including reduced life expectancy” |
Sulphur dioxide (SO2) | “It is a gas that can aggravate respiratory and cardiovascular conditions. It can trigger bronchospasm in asthmatics and its effects are heightened by exercise. Sulphur dioxide also from secondary (fine) particulate matter” |
Volatile organic compounds (VOCs) | “It includes a wide range of chemicals, some of which are carcinogenic to humans. Of most concern are benzene, formaldeyde, 1-3 butadiene and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons which include benzo(a)pyrene. VOCs can also react with NOx in the presence of sunlight to form ozone (O3) which is a lung irritant” |
Particulate matter (PM10 and PM2.5) | “It impacts predominantly on respiratory and cardiovascular systems. Effects can range from reduced lung function to increased medication use to more hospital admissions through to reduced life expectancy and death” |
Heavy metals | “These, such as lead and mercury, are a threat to the development of the chid in utero and early life. Lead is a cumulative toxicant that affects multiple body systems and can cause adverse neurological and behavioural effects in children. Mercury may have toxic effects on the nervous, digestive and immune systems, and on lungs, kidneys, skin and eyes” |
Dioxins | “They are highly toxic and can cause reproductive and developmental problems, damage the immune system, interfere with hormones and also cause cancer” |
Indicator | Unite of Measure | Scale |
---|---|---|
Production of public spaces as places | Sqm/total surface | Me–Ma |
Sense of place in sites/area | qualitative (scale 1–5) | Me |
Realization of low energy consumption systems in projects related to cultural heritage | N. | Mi |
Implementation of renewable energy sources in projects related to cultural heritage | N. | Mi |
Use of local traditional materials, bio-materials and/or reuse/materials in projects related to cultural heritage | tons/projects | Mi |
Amount of construction waste to landfill (reduction due to avoiding new construction thanks, for example, to adaptive reuse projects) | tons/year | Mi |
Job creation (linked for example to cultural heritage adaptive reuse) | N./year | Mi–Me–Ma |
Attraction capacity of innovative startups and companies (following the implementation of projects related to cultural heritage) | N./year | Mi–Me–Ma |
Attraction capacity of cultural and creative industries (following the implementation of projects related to cultural heritage) | N./year | Mi–Me–Ma |
Attraction capacity of new commercial activities (following the implementation of projects related to cultural heritage) | N./year | Mi–Me–Ma |
Attraction capacity of cultural visitors (following the implementation of projects related to cultural heritage) | N./year | Mi–Me–Ma |
Quality of public spaces in terms of attractiveness (enhancement of the quality following the implementation of projects related to cultural heritage) | Qualitative (scale 1–5) | Me–Ma |
Real estate values in the area (increase of values following the implementation of projects related to cultural heritage avoiding gentrification in the area) | €/year | Mi–Me–Ma |
Place attachment and local identity (following the implementation of projects related to cultural heritage) | Qualitative (scale 1–5) | Me–Ma |
Social cohesion (following the implementation of projects related to cultural heritage) | Qualitative (scale 1–5) | Me–Ma |
Inclusion of marginalized groups (following the implementation of projects related to cultural heritage) | Qualitative (scale 1–5) | Me–Ma |
Landscape visual quality of the area (following the implementation of projects related to cultural heritage) | Qualitative (perception, scale 1–5) | Me–Ma |
Cultural activities and events (following the implementation of projects related to cultural heritage) | N. events/year | Me–Ma |
Ctizens’ participation in cultural activities and events (following the implementation of projects related to cultural heritage) | N. participants/events | |
People wellbeing (following the implementation of projects related to cultural heritage) | Further research is needed for this indicator | Me–Ma |
Number of third sector units (non-governmental organizations (NGOs), associations, etc.) involved in partnership/cooperation (following the implementation of projects related to cultural heritage) | N./year | Me–Ma |
Number of startups, enterprises (following the implementation of projects related to cultural heritage) | N./year | Me–Ma |
Number of volunteers (following the implementation of projects related to cultural heritage) | N./year | Mi–Me–Ma |
Annual revenues from new uses/functions (following adaptive reuse projects) | €/year | Mi–Me–Ma |
Safety in the area (following the implementation of projects related to cultural heritage) | Qualitative (safety perception). N. of murders/year | Me–Ma |
Indicator | Unit of Misure | Scale |
---|---|---|
Health care spending on diseases caused by air pollution amounted on the total health expenditure | %/year | Mi–Me–Ma |
Lost productivity arising from ill health due to pollution (market cost) | €/year | Mi–Me–Ma |
Attraction of investments in environmental projects (willingness to pay of the public body to avoid health problems) | €/year | Me–Ma |
Impacts on health (including occupational health and safety issues, mental health and respiratory) due to use of nontoxic materials in remanufacturing, refurbishment, and reuse of products and components in “Circular buildings” | *** | Me–Ma |
Impacts on health (including occupational health and safety issues, mental health and respiratory) due to improved indoor air quality | *** | Me–Ma |
Impacts on health (including reduced cancer, negative birth outcomes, and respiratory risks) due to the reduced waste generation (thanks also to product life extension) | *** | Me–Ma |
Impacts on health (including reduced cancer, negative birth outcomes, and respiratory risks) due to the reduced production emissions (thanks also to product life extension) | *** | Me–Ma |
Reduced impacts on health (respiratory and cardiovascular conditions) due to lower emissions related to air quality from sharing models (as car sharing) | *** | Me–Ma |
Reduced impacts on health (cancer, negative birth outcomes, and respiratory diseases) due to the reduction of air, water and soil pollution thanks to recycling | *** | Me–Ma |
Reduced impacts on health (cancer, negative birth outcomes, and respiratory diseases) due to the reduction of air, water and soil pollution thanks efficient use of resources | *** | Me–Ma |
Reduced impacts on health (cancer, negative birth outcomes, and respiratory diseases) due to the reduction of air, water and soil pollution thanks to reduced use of landfill, and incineration | *** | Me–Ma |
Impacts on health (including road safety, road accident deaths and injuries) due to sharing models, shift in consumption in mobility sector | *** | Me–Ma |
Reduced impacts on health (cardiovascular and respiratory effects) due to lower air pollutants and GHG related to use of renewable energy sources, general move to renewable energy and energy efficiency in the circular economy across many sectors | *** | Me–Ma |
Reduced impacts on health (cancers, respiratory and negative birth outcomes) due to use of renewable energy sources, reduced generation of pollutants during energy recovery process | *** | Me–Ma |
Reduced costs in health sector that allow improving health services due to waste reduction and recycling in health sector | *** | Me–Ma |
Reduced impacts on health (cardiovascular and respiratory problems) due to indirect impact via reduced manufacturing air/water emissions thanks use of recycled materials in manufacturing processes | *** | Me–Ma |
Average income available on which wellbeing perception depends | €/year/person | Me–Ma |
Inequality index of disposable income. (Ratio between total equivalent income received by 20% of the population with the highest income and that received by 20% of the population with the lowest income). | %/year | Me–Ma |
Healthy life expectancy at birth. (Average number of years that a child born in the reference year can expect to live in good health, assuming that the risks of illness and death at different ages observed in that same year remain constant over time). | N. | Me–Ma |
Rate of non-participation in the work | % | Me–Ma |
Predatory crime index. Number of victims of home burglaries, pick-pocketing and robberies per 1,000 inhabitants | N./1000 inhabitants | Me–Ma |
Indicator | Unit of Misure | Scale |
---|---|---|
Number of building reused for a new function | N. | Me–Ma |
Number of spaces reused with a new function | Sqm/total city surface | Me–Ma |
Number of projects including nature-based solutions | N./total projects | Me–Ma |
Amount of financial support to implement nature-based solutions | €/year | Me–Ma |
Recovering of abandoned areas | Sqm recovered/sqm abandoned | Me–Ma |
Reduce production of waste due to the use of sustainable materials | tons/year | Mi–Me–Ma |
Adoption of green and blue infrastructure which can help to regulate CO₂ emissions, flooding and the heat island effect | N. | Mi–Me–Ma |
Virgin material use | %/year | Mi–Me–Ma |
Percentage of reuse of materials of buildings for repurposing | % | Mi |
Number of retrofitting projects | N./year | Mi–Me–Ma |
Number of projects/solutions that maximise energy efficiency and minimise waste reduction | N./year | Mi–Me–Ma |
Percentage of space for (peri-) urban farming in spatial planning | % | Me–Ma |
Changes in property value | €/year | Mi–Me–Ma |
Avoided damage costs | €/year | Me–Ma |
Carbon storage and sequestration in vegetation and soil | CO2/year | Me–Ma |
Monetary values: value of carbon sequestration by trees | €/year | Me–Ma |
Carbon savings from reduced building energy consumption | KJ/year | Mi |
Energy savings from reduced building energy consumption | CO2/year | Mi |
Temperature in urban areas (reductions thanks for example to the implementation of nature-based solutions (NBS) projects) | °C | Me |
Distribution of public green space – total surface or per capita | sqm/ total surface | Me–Ma |
Annual amount of pollutants captured by vegetation | CO2/year | Me–Ma |
Encourage re-use of building materials in new constructions | N. of incentives/year | Me–Ma |
Encourage efficient use of resources, materials, and construction techniques that maximise the effective life-cycle of the building | N. of incentives/year | Me–Ma |
Public transport links: walking distance to nearest facilities | Km | Me–Ma |
Land dedicated to pedestrians: percentage of road network | % | Me–Ma |
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Fusco Girard, L.; Nocca, F. Moving Towards the Circular Economy/City Model: Which Tools for Operationalizing This Model? Sustainability 2019, 11, 6253. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11226253
Fusco Girard L, Nocca F. Moving Towards the Circular Economy/City Model: Which Tools for Operationalizing This Model? Sustainability. 2019; 11(22):6253. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11226253
Chicago/Turabian StyleFusco Girard, Luigi, and Francesca Nocca. 2019. "Moving Towards the Circular Economy/City Model: Which Tools for Operationalizing This Model?" Sustainability 11, no. 22: 6253. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11226253
APA StyleFusco Girard, L., & Nocca, F. (2019). Moving Towards the Circular Economy/City Model: Which Tools for Operationalizing This Model? Sustainability, 11(22), 6253. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11226253