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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Circularity for Electric and Electronic Equipment (EEE), the Edge and Distributed Ledger (Edge&DL) Model

Terje Andersen, +1 more
- 03 Sep 2021 - 
- Vol. 13, Iss: 17, pp 9924
TLDR
Three fundamental circularity principles, the circular electric and electronic equipment (CEEE) principles, for manufactures of electronic and electrical equipment are defined and the model contributes to building new circularity systems for electronic and electric products that let manufacturers undertake their extended product responsibility.
Abstract
In the transition to a circular focus on electric and electronic products, manufacturers play a key role as the originators of both the products and the information about the products. While the waste electric and electronic equipment (WEEE) directive’s contemporary focus is on handling the product as waste after its end of life, the circular economy focuses on retaining the product’s value with a restorative system. The polluter-pays principle requires producers of pollution to bear the costs of handling the pollution, leading to the extended producer responsibility (EPR) principle. This requires manufacturers to change their focus from their current passive role of out-sourcing end-of-life treatment to taking explicit responsibility for product management over an extended period of time. This paper investigates how a manufacturer can assume its responsibility to achieve circularity for its products. Based on our findings, three fundamental circularity principles, the circular electric and electronic equipment (CEEE) principles, for manufactures of electronic and electrical equipment are defined: (1) Serialize product identifiers, (2) data controlled by their authoritative source at the edge, and (3) independent actors’ access to edge data via a distributer ledger are the foundation of the Edge and Distributed Ledger (Edge&DL) model. We demonstrate the model through a case study of how to achieve circularity for lighting equipment. The CEEE principles and the demonstrated model contribute to building new circularity systems for electronic and electric products that let manufacturers undertake their extended product responsibility.

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Citations
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The Open Innovation Paradox: Knowledge Sharing and Protection in R&D Collaborations

Marcel Bogers
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the paradox that arises when firms simultaneously share and protect their knowledge in an alliance with other organizations and identify which strategies can be developed to cope with this tension.
Peer Review

Critical success factors for implementing blockchain­based circular supply chain

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Critical success factors for implementing blockchain‐based circular supply chain

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors examined the critical success factors for implementing blockchain-based CSCs and identified 10 CSFs through a short systematic literature review, and then, the integrated fuzzy cognitive mapping and fuzzy best-worst method (FCM-FBWM) was implemented to examine CSFs for the blockchain based CSC.
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Product design and business model strategies for a circular economy

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