Abstract

Relatively few consumers are conscious of the waste generated in the course of producing the goods that they consume, although most are aware of the amount of waste they dispose of. This article reports on a small-scale survey (N = 28) among stakeholders aimed at developing adequate communication of preconsumer waste footprints of consumer goods in the context of the circular economy. Life cycle assessment (LCA) practitioners and consumers assessed five methodological details of an approach for calculating and communicating a product waste footprint (PWF). Most of the respondents expressed that the guidelines described in the proposed PWF methodology are good enough for the purposes of differentiating waste and byproducts, and defining which material flow shall be accounted for. Some LCA practitioners declared that the proposed streamlined method may not be adequate for conveying the environmental significance of waste types. The respondents also expressed that the PWF concept would be primarily useful and/or needed for consumers and government, and in the contexts of improving environmental awareness of consumers, environmental policy making, visualizing waste flows in a circular economy, and improving resource efficiency in industry, and less useful/needed in a business-to-business context. The PWF has been successfully used by diverse stakeholder groups in Sweden mostly to promote sustainable production and consumption across society. A notable example is the ‘invisible waste’ (#invisiblewaste) campaign of the Swedish Waste Management Association (Avfall Sverige). The concerns of the LCA experts have therefore not held true. The symbolic power and parsimony of the PWF concept appears to be effective in sensitizing consumers towards waste issues so that circular economy strategies beyond recycling are possible to be fully realized.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe disclosure of environmental information at several system levels (product, company, city, region, country, humanity) for different stakeholders (final consumers, policy makers, business, academia) is an important area of sustainability

  • The disclosure of environmental information at several system levels for different stakeholders is an important area of sustainability

  • With the recent action plan for a circular economy (CE) by the European Commission, as well as several other initiatives around the globe, there has been an exponential interest on CE initiatives branded under the CE tag in business [9], popularized by the Ellen MacArthur

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The disclosure of environmental information at several system levels (product, company, city, region, country, humanity) for different stakeholders (final consumers, policy makers, business, academia) is an important area of sustainability. Ecological footprint [1], carbon footprint [2], water footprint [3], energy footprint [4], nitrogen footprint [5], chemical footprint [6], and material footprint [7,8] are examples of footprint-based indicators commonly used to measure environmental emissions, resource use, and other impacts. Each of these indicators discloses one layer of information about the full disturbance of anthropogenic activities on the natural environment at different system levels, for different purposes, uses, and users. Longevity and repair are major strategies in reducing the need for extraction and must come before the recycling strategy [13]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call