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Circular economy rebound

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors argue that circular economy activities can increase overall production, which can partially or fully offset their benefits, and they have termed this effect "circular economy rebound".
Abstract
Summary The so-called circular economy—the concept of closing material loops to preserve products, parts, and materials in the industrial system and extract their maximum utility—has recently started gaining momentum. The idea of substituting lower-impact secondary production for environmentally intensive primary production gives the circular economy a strong intuitive environmental appeal. However, proponents of the circular economy have tended to look at the world purely as an engineering system and have overlooked the economic part of the circular economy. Recent research has started to question the core of the circular economy—namely, whether closing material and product loops does, in fact, prevent primary production. In this article, we argue that circular economy activities can increase overall production, which can partially or fully offset their benefits. Because there is a strong parallel in this respect to energy efficiency rebound, we have termed this effect “circular economy rebound.” Circular economy rebound occurs when circular economy activities, which have lower per-unit-production impacts, also cause increased levels of production, reducing their benefit. We describe the mechanisms that cause circular economy rebound, which include the limited ability of secondary products to substitute for primary products, and price effects. We then offer some potential strategies for avoiding circular economy rebound. However, these strategies are unlikely to be attractive to for-profit firms, so we caution that simply encouraging private firms to find profitable opportunities in the circular economy is likely to cause rebound and lower or eliminate the potential environmental benefits.

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Citations
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The Relevance of Circular Economy Practices to the Sustainable Development Goals

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors identify the extent to which circular economy practices are relevant for the implementation of the sustainable development goals (SDGs) and conclude that CE practices can be applied as a "toolbox" and specific implementation approaches for achieving a sizeable number of SDG targets.
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How do scholars approach the circular economy? A systematic literature review

TL;DR: A systematic literature review exploring the state-of-the-art of academic research on circular economy (CE) is presented in this paper, where the authors examine the CE body of literature with a systematic approach, to provide an exhaustive analysis of the phenomenon with rigorous and reproducible research criteria.
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A Review and Typology of Circular Economy Business Model Patterns

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors conduct a morphological analysis of 26 current circular economy business models from the literature, which includes defining their major business model dimensions and identifying the specific characteristics of these dimensions.
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Circular economy indicators: What do they measure?

TL;DR: A classification framework to understand what indicators measure is proposed and none of the analysed indicators focuses on the preservation of functions.
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Targets for a circular economy

TL;DR: In this paper, a framework based on 10 common circular economy strategies (i.e. recover, recycling, repurpose, remanufacture, refurbish, repair, reuse, reduce, rethink, refuse) is applied to scrutinise the selected targets.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Energy efficiency and consumption — the rebound effect — a survey

TL;DR: In this paper, a review of some of the relevant literature from the US offers definitions and identifies sources including direct, secondary, and economy-wide sources and concludes that the range of estimates for the size of the rebound effect is very low to moderate.
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Strategies for Manufacturing

TL;DR: The traditional model of industrial production is highly wasteful and ultimately unsustainable in contemporary society as mentioned in this paper and without change to a more integrated environmentally sound model of production waste pollution economic development and population growth will bury the earth.
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The circular economy

TL;DR: A new relationship with the authors' goods and materials would save resources and energy and create local jobs, explains Walter R. Stahel.

The Economics of the Coming Spaceship Earth

Abstract: We are now in the middle of a long process of transition in the nature of the image which man has of himself and his environment. Primitive men, and to a large extent also men of the early civilizations, imagined themselves to be living on a virtually illimitable plane. There was almost always somewhere beyond the known limits of human habitation, and over a very large part of the time that man has been on earth, there has been something like a frontier. That is, there was always some place else to go when things got too difficult, either by reason of the deterioration of the natural environment or a deterioration of the social structure in places where people happened to live. The image of the frontier is probably one of the oldest images of mankind, and it is not surprising that we find it hard to get rid of.
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A review of the circular economy in China : Moving from rhetoric to implementation

TL;DR: In this paper, a sustainable development strategy proposed by the central government of China, aiming to improve the efficiency of materials and energy use, is presented, formally accept by the authors.
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