This is a low impact website.
JOIN 10-DAY BOOTCAMP
         5 April 2022          Danny R.

Circular economies – crazy amounts of upside

A report called the “Potential Economic Pay-Off of a Circular Economy” was commissioned in 2020, to understand the financial benefits of Australia going circular.

There would be endless benefits – as the report states: “Circular activities and processes not only extend the usable life of products but also extend their value, create new jobs and raise economic growth.”

It goes on to highlight 8 “opportunities” for further development towards achieving a more circular economy – I’m not going to pretend I’ve read all 63 pages of it (yet, I’ve skimmed), but all of the opportunities essentially talk about reducing waste in some form by either eliminating it, or managing it better. For example, car sharing:

“The benefits of adopting car sharing go beyond environmental benefits. A study on the impact of car sharing for the City of Sydney found that each car share vehicle in the sharing network represented a $60,000 annual net value to the City, translating to an annual benefit of $48 million for the current network of around 800 vehicles. This included direct benefits such as savings associated with not owning a car, as well as savings accruing to reductions in congestion and car crashes due to lower private car use.”

Other examples include turning organic waste into biogas (a renewable and clean energy source which can be converted into heat or electricity) and reducing food waste, of which the two-thirds comes from households and primary producers.

Waste reduction and innovative management of it will be a huge opportunity this decade.

We acknowledge that we work on Wangal land of the wider Eora nation now known as Sydney. Wangal land sadly no longer inhabits any Wangal people.

We pay respect to the Elders of the past, as well as current and emerging Elders of surrounding lands and beyond. Let's all care for Wangal land, the Eora nation and Country.

For self-employed creatives, normal business traps are easy to fall into and overcomplicate things - but they’re totally avoidable when flying solo.

Learn how to keep things simple, enjoyable, and climate-smart in around 2 minutes a day by joining The Climate Soloist.

Emails arrive daily. Unsubscribe anytime.
© 2024 Impact Labs Australia.
crossmenu
linkedin facebook pinterest youtube rss twitter instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter instagram