Your say / Society

Ending the throwaway society

By Glenn Vowles  Monday Mar 9, 2015

Half a million jobs would be created by transforming our economy from a take, make and throwaway one to a genuinely green one which optimises efficiency, renewability and working with environmental respect.

This is the conclusion of a recent report by the Waste and Resources Action Program (WRAP)  and the Green Alliance Bristol’s green ambitions are thus good economically and socially as well as environmentally – but radical change is best.

The report found that whilst significant further recycling and remanufacturing would generate more jobs it’s even better to make substantial progress with these and add in major development of the re-use and bio-refining sectors as well as shifting from product manufacturing to product-service systems. Politicians and other decision makers would need to be much more active and ambitious and set the frameworks needed for this, including setting higher standards for product and resource recovery.   

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The key green idea is to create a circular economy based on making, reusing and remaking: fewer resources are taken from the environment; management is sensitive and centres on renewable resources; production is efficient, clean and for long life; product and system use is efficient, with high emphasis on repairing and maintaining; products and resources are re-used (or recycled or used as an energy source if re-use is not possible).

All these green ideas and more were key topics explored and discussed between 3 – 5 March at Resource 2015  the yearly congress and exhibition bringing together 11,000 attendees: individuals, organisations and businesses large and small.

The circular economy concept and the resource event itself should be more widely reported, especially in aspiring green cities like Bristol. Independent environmental consultancy Resource Futures is one of the sponsors and participants. Bristol University’s Bruce Hood, Professor of Developmental Psychology in Society, was a speaker this year, covering issues like: what makes us want to own things; what we think of second-hand items and sharing.   

In the circular economy waste does not exist as resources recirculate. Diversity is designed and built into systems, processes and manufacturing – making communities and society more resilient. Energy is managed well, used efficiently and comes from renewable sources that don’t significantly pollute and won’t run out.

The whole idea is based on systems thinking, seeing situations in total, i.e. as a whole, accounting for interactions, interrelationships and interdependencies between parts. The significance is that society would be dynamically stable, secure and able to persist over time, leaving a decent world for future generations.

Image: arunart / shutterstock 

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