Circular Economy: Transforming Burden To Bounty: 1. Waste: A Universal Burden
Circular Economy: Transforming Burden To Bounty: 1. Waste: A Universal Burden
Circular Economy: Transforming Burden To Bounty: 1. Waste: A Universal Burden
Despite having no consensus, two commonly cited definitions provide well-rounded explanations on what
waste is (and is not).
According to Basel convention, “wastes are substances or objects which are disposed or
are intended to be disposed or are required to be disposed of by the provisions of national
laws”1 .
More elaborately, the United Nations Statistics Division defines wastes as materials that
are not prime products (that is products produced for market) for which the generator
has no further use in terms of his/her own purpose of production, transformation or
consumption, and of which she/he wants to dispose. On the aspects of generation, it
further states that “wastes may be generated during the extraction of raw materials, the
processing of raw materials into intermediate and final products, the consumption of
final products, and other human activities. Residuals recycled or reused at the place of
generation are excluded” 1 .
As hinted in the definitions, ‘waste’ is a complex subject which necessarily making it difficult to classify. The
multitude of variables acting upon it is illustrated in the Figure 1 below. It also highlights the underlying
complexity of ‘management’ of waste, which an intensifying theme of discussion, globally.
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Despite the broad scope of the subject, herein we focus on the most bothersome aspect of waste; Municipal
Solid Waste [MSW] to illustrate how a burden could be transformed to a bounty through the use of sensible
management practices and respective technologies.
Substantiated by the current definitions and the negative connotation tethered to it, ‘waste’ in general is
considered as a burden, a nuisance, and something that must be put ‘away’. Away from the socio-economic
systems. For time immemorial, this ‘away’ has been a hole in the ground or a water body (either flowing or
stagnant, salty or fresh). With increasing population, rapid economic growth, diminishing land availability, and
nearly manic societal metabolism, this ‘away’ has come rapidly and dangerously close to the socio-economic
systems itself that generate waste, globally. At the turn of the Anthropocene, we have realised that there is no
‘away’ anymore to dispose of our societal metabolic by-products.
According to a World Bank report, it was estimated that the global burden of MSW is going to be over 2.2
billion tonnes per annum with a generation rate of 1.42 kilograms per capita by 2025; ca. a factor-3 increment
compared to that of the base year (2002). See Table 1. It underscores the fact that already strained global MSW
management methods such as landfilling and incineration shall implode under the mounting pressure not
only due to the limited capacity issues but also due to the heavy environmental burden resulting from them.
Therefore, a paradigm shift in MSW management is required, pronto.
Table 2: Incineration is the wrong choice, [Sources: Leonard, 2010; NTN1 , n/a]
1. Releases toxic air pollutants and Incinerators’ emissions include persistent organic
produce toxic ashes pollutants (e.g. dioxins and furans and also nanoparticles
and toxic heavy metals that impact human and ecosystem
health. All incinerators produce ash (fly ash and bottom
ash) contaminated with toxic heavy meatless and POPs.
2. Dirtiest form of energy that wastes Burning waste produces toxic emissions and greenhouse
embedded energy gases. It dissipates the embedded energy in resources
such as in plastics or synthetic polymers and recovers
only a minute fraction by way of calorific value.
3. Undermines recycling efforts and High calorific value ‘fuel’ required to run the incinerators
destroy resources are also the high market value resources (such as plastics,
paper, and wood) with embedded energy that can be
easily recycled, that is burnet and destroyed to produce
toxic ashes.
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4. The costliest waste management The lifecycle costs of incineration are among the highest of
option that entrenches a linear economy all waste management solutions whereas it [incineration]
relies on a steady supply of waste for decade. That
encourages steady waste generation through the use of
virgin resources and prevents recycling, sustaining a liner
economy.
With current exhaust gas treatment technologies, as standardly required in developed countries such as
Germany in its “Technical Instruction Air Safety (TA Luft)” the first two arguments could be countered. A set
of different high-tec filter cascades does the magic, but at high cost. In average, in Germany the treatment cost
in waste incineration plants sums up to a 160EUR per ton of MSW. That´s a negative added value and lead
to tremendous high energy prices, which above the levelized cost of energy (LCOE) achieved by competitive
renewable energy technologies.
Despite a broad spectrum of persuasive evidence opposing the conventional MSW management practices,
landfilling, dumping, and incineration continues to thrive globally due to the general lack of ‘enforced’ laws,
political and social willingness to change, and tangible alternatives. To that end, the need of the hour is a
paradigm shift.
Evident from the European frontier of sustainable environmental management, it is clear that waste is no
longer considered a burden thanks to the enabling policies and enforced laws those that actively support the
sustainable resource management models –such as the Circular Economy model– and environmentally benign
waste-to-resource technologies.
Moving out of the existing ‘linear economic model’ –which is based on the premise that resources are unlimited,
which perpetuates the ‘extract, process, use, and discard’ iteration– is a major paradigm shift. For example, in
Germany, this process is accelerated through the policy implementation of ‘closure of the landfills by (2005)3.
The alternative model pursued; the Circular Economy model, is, as the European Parliament Research Service
noted, “the notion that the value of materials and products is kept as high as possible for as long as possible”,
through cyclical use of the material in an economy. It further notes that “this [CE model] helps to minimise
the need for the input of new material and energy, thereby reducing environmental pressure linked to the life-
cycle of products, from resources extraction, through production and use to end-of-life”4. Figure 2 synoptically
presents the concept of Circular Economy where waste is no longer viewed as a burden, instead ‘a resource’ that
fuels a multitude of cyclic economic activities. CE concept is based on the ecological principles of symbiosis
and material recycling in nature, thus true to its principles the scale and scope of CE applications are vast.
Figure 2: The concept of Circular Economy [CE], [Graphic source: EPRS, 2017]
To elaborate the practical application of sustainable waste management in the Circular Economy, here we
provide an example from the Europe’s First Zero Emission Campus; the Environmental Campus Birkenfeld
[ECB].
ECB (established in 1996); a sub-campus of the Trier University of Applied Science is a converted, disused
American reserve military hospital employing eco-compatible building methods and zero emission technologies
to become the first Zero Emission Campus in Europe. Among an extensive portfolio of cutting-edge ZE
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technologies, ECB is maintaining its energy autonomy to date through the use of Zero Emission, renewable,
and green energy by utilising regionally available biomass. Energy –both heat and electricity– are supplied by
a neighbouring biomass combined heat and power station, which uses regionally available waste-wood and
organic MSW. Based on the principles of industrial symbiosis [IS], ECB is connected to the neighbouring eco-
industrial park via a district heating system and a low-voltage electricity transmission grid (for energy flows),
whereas to reciprocate the flows, the biomass generated on campus is supplied to the biomass-based power
station. The wood-chip-based power station –established in 1997– has an installed thermal capacity of 28MW,
which utilises ca. 65,000 tonnes of low and high contaminated waste wood per year sourced from regional
forestry, agriculture, landscape gardening, and industry to produce 8MW heat, 37.5 tonnes per hours of steam
and up to 8.3MW electricity for ECB, the neighbouring industrial facilities, and the national electricity grid.
In addition, the cogeneration unit utilises the biogas output of the nearby anaerobic digester that treats ca.
40,000 tonnes of bio-waste annually, collected from the Municipalities of Birkenfeld (including the food and
other organic waste of ECB) and Bad Kreuznach. The by-products of anaerobic digestion of bio-waste, both
liquid and solid fractions, are provided to the local farmers to be used as fertiliser and soil amendments in the
agricultural croplands thereby close the regional nutrient cycle. This further reduces the soil, water, and air
pollution due to the disposal of bio-waste in a conventional landfill. Also, this action strengthens the regional
economy by preventing the net cash outflow by eliminating the need to purchase synthetic fertiliser for crop
production. Figure 3 below schematically presents the waste-to-resource system of ECB based on the CE model.
In addition, this waste-to-resources initiative of ECB has created a large number of direct and indirect
employments in the energy and environmental management sectors. It also serves as a regional and national
‘lighthouse project’ for ZE, CE, and suitable regional development knowledge dissemination. Annually a large
number of students, researchers, public and private sector employees, and interest groups and citizens visit this
faculty to learn from the practical example, which is organised as part of the knowledge sharing efforts of ECB5.
References
1. Assamoi, B., and Lawryshyn, Y., 2012, The environmental comparison of landfilling vs. incineration of MSW
accounting for waste diversion, Waste Management, 32, 1019–1030.
2. Leonard, A., 2010, The Story of Stuff, Simon & Schuster, USA, pp. 272-279
3. Triggered by the European Union ‘Landfill Directive’: 1999/31/EC, by 2005 all landfills in Germany were shut and
harmonized with the EU directive on inert material disposal. See: https://www.umweltbundesamt.de/en/topics/
waste-resources/waste-disposal/landfill
4. EPRS, 2017, Towards a circular economy - Waste management in the EU, pp. 16-17. See: http://www.europarl.
europa.eu/RegData/etudes/STUD/2017/581913/EPRS_STU(2017)581913_EN.pdf
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