Emergent Imaginaries and Fragmented Policy Frameworks in the Canadian Bio-Economy
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“DASANI® is taking steps to reduce its impact on the planet with a major innovation in bottle design. PlantBottle® packaging is made from up to 30% plant-based material that replaces some of the non-renewable petroleum or fossil-based resources used in conventional PET plastic. Still designed to be 100% recyclable, it helps save our world’s precious resources”.[1]
“The challenge facing policy makers—whether in government, in private industry or elsewhere—is how to make choices that allow the opportunities offered through biotechnology, genetics, genomics and the biosciences more generally to be delivered. This can be problematic, since decisions taken today can influence whether unforeseen or unconfirmed future opportunities might be realizable. A degree of foresight or vision is therefore necessary so that, to the extent possible, short-term decisions can be taken without negative impacts on longer term opportunities”.[4] (p. 5)
2. Imagined Futures: Policy Visions and Policy Frameworks
3. Methodological Note
4. Emergent Imaginaries in the Canadian Bio-Economy
4.1. Competing Definitions of the Bio-Economy 1: Bio-Based Products
Civil Society Organization (#95): “Well we use sort of a standard definition where basically all materials, energy, chemicals and consumer products are built out of or based upon renewable biological resources, as opposed to non-renewable fossil fuels.”
4.2. Competing Definitions of the Bio-Economy 2: Substitution
4.3. Competing Definitions of the Bio-Economy 3: Renewable versus Sustainable
4.4. Competing Definitions of the Bio-Economy 4: Societal Transitions
5. Fragmented Policy Frameworks in the Canadian Bio-Economy
5.1. Configuring Policy Frameworks
“I don’t necessarily think that a change in political party is going to make a big change, and I think partly because as a lobby group, the bio-economy players, the agents are just too fragmented. And there’s not this over-arching vision about what it can be in terms of who all the players are”.(Civil Society Organization #95)
- Forest Products Association of Canada: Bio-Pathways Report (2011) contains no real definition of ‘bio-economy’, but refers to “integrating current operations with new add-on processes that create bio-energy, biochemical and bio-materials that add value and jobs” [43] (p. 3).
- Canadian Renewable Fuels Association: Evolution and Growth: From Biofuels to Bioeconomy (2014) report contains, again, no real definition, but refers to “In addition to environmental benefits, the economic impact of a diverse bioeconomy sector affects the entire value chain, employs a wide array of sciences (life sciences, agronomy, ecology, food science and social sciences), and enables continual development in industrial technologies (biotechnology, nanotechnology and engineering)” [34].
- BIOTECanada: Becoming a World Leading Bioeconomy by 2025 (2015) report refers to the fact that “The OECD has defined the world bioeconomy as comprising one-third of the total world economy. This includes renewable biomass, and the integration of biotechnology across sectors” [44] (p. 7).
“It seems like each of them sort of had people that were sort of, they were trying to figure out how we’re going to use these, the old mills, and of course the bio-economy was a way of doing it”.(Federal Ministry #104)
5.2. Fragmented Policy Frameworks
- Well, I mean we don’t really have a bio-economy strategy per se, right... You know you can talk about some bio-economy strategy and stuff, but, you know, then you run into details” (University #90).
- “Canada does not have a national bio-economy strategy... Yeah we do need to get something like that in place here. And we don’t really have it on a provincial basis either” (Civil Society Organization #92).
- “Canadian policy on bio-economy, we really don’t have one for agriculture” (Civil Society Association #94).
- “Well, we don’t have federally anything that is sort of called a bio-economy policy, at least certainly not one that I’m aware of” (Consultancy #100).
- “Well, certainly you’re probably even more familiar than I am of some significant nations have put in place bio-economy policies, Canada has not. That doesn’t mean that there aren’t really good things in place from a policy perspective that supports bio-economy” (Trade Association #107).
- “We don’t have, even in Canada we don’t have a federal framework to support bio-economy” (Provincial Ministry #110).
“So, again, the bio-economy for us is the piece that weaves all of our other asks together. The individual asks, we actually get a lot of support for... But an overarching framework just sounds like a lot of work, right?”.(Trade Association #109)
“…there is a sense out there that it needs to be done [to support biofuels], but no, I think honestly, I think the industry, the private sector, is a little more wound up about this right now than the government guys”.(University #103)
“I don’t necessarily think that a change in political party is going to make a big change, and I think partly because as a lobby group, the bio-economy players, the agents are just too fragmented. And there’s not this over-arching vision about what it can be in terms of who all the players are”.(Civil Society Organization #95)
5.3. Recent Changes and Ways Forward
The bio-economy is a concept that refers to the sustainable use of biological, renewable materials in the development of bio-based products, services and energy that substitute for existing fossil fuel-based products, services, and energy, as part of a broader societal transition to a low-carbon future.
6. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Policy Actor | Number | Examples |
---|---|---|
Government | 5 | Federal ministries and agencies; Provincial ministries and agencies |
Business | 9 | Biofuel companies; Trade associations (biotech, biofuels, feedstock suppliers); Consultancies |
Civil Society | 5 | Academia; Non-profit support initiatives |
Informant | Definition |
---|---|
Consultancy (#93) | “It would be the manufacturing use of products that are made from biological organisms. So things that are grown, can live, and be harvested and sustainably used again through the life-cycle of an organism.” |
Trade Association (#99) | “From our vantage point we view the bio-economy as any product or thing, if you will, that can be produced from crops that isn’t traditionally food.” |
Consultancy (#100) | “Making stuff from carbohydrates... So basically, I’m saying that manufacturing products that come in whole or in part from biomass.” |
Federal Agency (#106) | “For me the bio-economy is the development of technologies and products that are derived from things that use as an input naturally occurring materials... but something that comes from an organic nature.” |
Provincial Ministry (#110) | “I think bio-economy composes of anything that includes the use of either whole of significant part of any biological renewable materials or any organic materials from plants and animals which could be used to make a product for commercial or industrial use.” |
Informant | Definition |
---|---|
Trade Association (#97) | “So as far as the bio-economy goes, I mean, I think from our perspective we see it as an outlet or opportunity for-, to take demand for our product, essentially.” |
Provincial Ministry (#98) | “So bio-economy is—a what we call a bio-economy—an economic activity which is based on manufacturing of any biobased product. Using some of these renewable material—like agriculture, forestry based materials... So it’s an economic act, we very advanced stage of product using renewable biomass materials to substitute fossil fuel based product and material.” |
Trade Association (#107) | “I think the bio-economy is leveraging the renewable resources that we’re blessed with in Canada to deliver sustainable products to global markets.” |
Trade Association (#109) | “... about creating an environment where sustainable products and stable fuels can be more easily integrated into the economy of Canada. It’s a comprehensive approach to the management of our resources in a way that promote the use of less carbon intensive fuels.” |
Informant | Definition |
---|---|
University (#90) | “... in a lot of people’s minds it’s substitution of bio-based material for fossil fuel-based ones” |
Civil Society Association (#94) | “... substitution of either a biochemical or a fossil based chemical represents a tremendous gain in terms of footprint” |
Provincial Ministry (#99) | “So it’s an economic act, we very advanced stage of product using renewable biomass materials to substitute fossil fuel based product and material” |
Federal Agency (#106) | “... we are going to be looking for things that can be fully replaced” |
Provincial Ministry (#110) | “... substitute fossil based economy with a biobased economy” |
Trade Association (#109) | “... we would like to replace those [petroleum based substances] with those that are not based on sequestered carbons” |
Informant | Definition |
---|---|
Consultancy (#93) | “Renewable is one thing that’s sort of inherent in the definition” |
Consultancy (#100) | “... you’re making products from renewable resources, whether it be trees or crops or whatever, then as long as those trees and crops are managed in a sustainable way, then obviously the bio-economy can be part of a sustainable economy” |
Civil Society Association (#94) | “... the bio-economy is an industrial sector that depends on inputs from agriculture, forestry, it means inputs are renewable” |
Informant | Definition |
---|---|
Provincial Ministry (#98) | “holistic approach” |
Consultancy (#100) | “it’s a shift away from the hydrocarbon economy to the carbohydrate economy” |
Civil Society Organization (#95) | “for biomass to be sustainable, it has to be renewable within a human lifespan, it has to protect diversity, and it has to value the aesthetics and environmental services that biomass provides while it’s living” |
Civil Society Organization (#92) | “So you create something that’s more of a hybrid system for transition” |
University (#90) | “Well you know it’s economy, right? So it’s spanning not just an individual product or anything, it’s all facets of our lives in terms of the way that our society functions and the role that biological resources can play in that” |
University (#103) | “trying to shift our economy off the-, well I guess in our case, specifically the petro chemicals, and more onto biologicals that are renewable sustainable biologicals” |
University (#96) | “idea of the carbon within our bio-economy is not fossil carbon, and it’s based on biological systems”; “It was one that would move from a —it was like a fossil fuel-based economy to a bio-economy, where biological processes would, we’d use the power of photosynthetic plants and photosynthesis to bring energy and complex carbon molecules into our environment, and in the process not have to... be able to leave some of the fossil fuels in the ground” |
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Birch, K. Emergent Imaginaries and Fragmented Policy Frameworks in the Canadian Bio-Economy. Sustainability 2016, 8, 1007. https://doi.org/10.3390/su8101007
Birch K. Emergent Imaginaries and Fragmented Policy Frameworks in the Canadian Bio-Economy. Sustainability. 2016; 8(10):1007. https://doi.org/10.3390/su8101007
Chicago/Turabian StyleBirch, Kean. 2016. "Emergent Imaginaries and Fragmented Policy Frameworks in the Canadian Bio-Economy" Sustainability 8, no. 10: 1007. https://doi.org/10.3390/su8101007
APA StyleBirch, K. (2016). Emergent Imaginaries and Fragmented Policy Frameworks in the Canadian Bio-Economy. Sustainability, 8(10), 1007. https://doi.org/10.3390/su8101007