From Waste to Wealth: What Opportunities Abound in a Circular Economy?

In HSBC’s view, the circular economy is an alternative economic model tothe linear model which constists of - manufacture, use and dispose. It promotessustainable development by designing products, systemsand processes that focus on recycling and reuse.
Tim Evans, CEO of HSBC Vietnam
Tim Evans, CEO of HSBC Vietnam

Recently, Tim Evans, CEO of HSBC Vietnam released a report analyzing the opportunities to build the circular economy.

As environmental concerns rise and resources deplete we need to shift towards a new model of consumption which can support the economy and help the planet: the circular economy. What posibilities as well as what challenges should we be aware of?

Earth Overshoot Day is a concept developed by Andrew Simms of UK think tank New Economics Foundation and promoted by its partner organisation Global Footprint Network. Itmarks the date when humanity has used all the biological resources that the Earth regenerates during the entire year.This year, Earth Overshoot Day fell on 28thJuly, which meanson this day, we hadused all of the world’snatural resources budget for 2022. The date is comingearlierand earlier each year. In 1970, we overshot this threshold 2 days before the year end. This year, we overshot the threshold 156 days before the year end.

The truth is we consume a lot and waste a lot. Think about the resources you consumed in the pastweek:the clothes you bought, the food you ate, the distance you travelled. Think about everything you threw away: the single use plastic items like bags, bottles, coffee cups, straws, boxes, spoons, etc.

Not only this, but the extraction, processing and manufacture of goods for society accounts for a staggering 62% of total global greenhouse gas emissions. Excess emissions are released from inefficient use of resources and waste, contributing to an estimated 1.6 billion tonnes of carbon emissions generated from solid waste management alone , which is the equivalent of having 350 million cars on the road. It also generates significant amounts of waste and pollution. Currrently, 60% of discarded materials are either sent to landfills or incinerated, thereby damaging the natural environment. This is even more alarming as global waste generation is set to increase by 70% by 2050, according to the World Bank .

Do we really need to extract from the natural environment at the rate that we currently do? Can net zero emissions be achieved without net zero waste? The answer is no. So what can we do?

A switch to circular economy

There are many definitions available on what the circular economy is. In HSBC’s view, the circular economy is an alternative economic model tothe linear model which constists of - manufacture, use and dispose. It promotessustainable development by designing products, systemsand processes that focus on recycling and reuse, thereby ultimatelyminimising waste, conserving natural resources andproviding efficiency gains.

The concept of circularity is that we move from a world where we make-consume-dispose to one where there is less leakage, where waste canbe fed back into the system as raw materials, where products and systems are designed to beeasier to recycle, and where we use much more than just consume and dispose. Transitioning to a circular economic model can help preserve scarce resources, protect our environment, unlock sustainableeconomic development potential and improve our quality of life.

Under the current linear model, natural resources are under strain. Over the coming decade, millions more people all over the world are expected to become ‘middle-class’ consumers, pushing global consumption ever higher. Given the finite resources we have at our disposal, a new model for economic prosperity is becoming even morenecessary.Clearly, today’s linear world is unsustainable when the amount of resources extracted from our planet are rising bynearly 2% per year.

A linear economy follows the “take-make-dispose” approach - raw materials are collected, then transformed into products that are used until they are finally discarded as waste. If left unchecked, the linear economy will produce as many products as possible, damaging the environment in the process due to unrestrained resource extraction, excessive carbon emission, unwanted pollution and excessive waste.

Unlike the linear economy, the circular economy requires a paradigm shift, to one where resources are reused for as long as possible, by optimising the re-utilisation of consumer goods and active recycling of unwanted materials.

The impact is huge

The circular economy can help us save energy and resources. It also brings economic benefits, and quite subtantial ones too. The move towards a more circular economy can contribute $4.5 trillion in additional economic output by 2030, and $25 trillion by 2050, as a result of resources being better utilised and morejobs being created in higher-skilled industries away from resource extraction and waste disposal. According to ILO projections, “under the circular economy scenario, worldwide employment would grow by 0.1% by 2030 in comparison with a business-as-usual scenario”. Employment would grow in the services and waste management sectors by roughly 50 million and 45 million jobs respectively. The World Economic Forum estimates that by 2025, recycling, reusing, and remanufacturing could help unlock $1 trillion a year in wasted resources and reduce 100 million tonnes of waste globally.

Despite this, the world is still only 9% circular. There is a huge amount still to be done in order to transition a notable share of the world away from a linear model. There are two requirements to “close the loop” involving sustainable resource management and waste management. This is where plenty of opportunities can be found, from technology companies developing new materials, products or processes to a closed-loop model, to companies committed to transitioning to the sustainable circular approach. Opportunities are abound for both businesses and investors.

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