Abstract

The recent circular economy movement has raised awareness and interest about untapped environmental and economic potential in the manufacturing industry. One of the crucial aspects in the implementation of circular or closed-loop manufacturing approach is the design of circular products. While it is obvious that three post-use strategies, i.e., reuse, remanufacturing, and recycling, are highly relevant to achieve loop closure, it is enormously challenging to choose “the right” strategy (if at all) during the early design stage and especially at the single component level. One reason is that economic and environmental impacts of adapting these strategies are not explicit as they vary depending on the chosen business model and associated supply chains. In this scenario, decision support is essential to motivate adaptation of regenerative design strategies. The main purpose of this paper is to provide reliable decision support at the intersection of multiple lifecycle design and business models in the circular economy context to identify effects on cost and CO2 emissions. The development of this work consists of a systematic method to quantify design effort for different circular design options through a multi-method simulation approach. The simulation model combines an agent-based product architecture and a discrete event closed-loop supply chain model. Feasibility of the model is tested using a case of a washing machine provided by Gorenje d.d. Firstly, design efforts for reuse, remanufacturing, and recycling are quantified. Secondly, cost and emissions of different design options are explored with different business model configurations. Finally, an optimization experiment is run to identify the most cost-effective combination of reused, remanufactured, and recycled components for a business model chosen on the basis of the explorative study results.

Highlights

  • The recent circular economy (CE) movement has raised awareness as well as interest about untapped environmental and economic potential in manufacturing industry

  • The main purpose of this paper is to provide reliable decision support at the intersection of multiple lifecycle design and business models in the circular economy context to identify effects on cost and CO2 emissions

  • This paper provides researchers as well as practitioners with a quantitative analysis tool to explore design and CE business model combinations and optimize design to fit to a model of preference or choice

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Summary

Introduction

The recent circular economy (CE) movement has raised awareness as well as interest about untapped environmental and economic potential in manufacturing industry. A transition from a linear (take-make-dispose) to a closedloop or circular system requires a move from the conventional model of selling physical products to selling access to functionality or service In such service-based business models, including leasing or pay-per-use, the manufacturers retain ownership of their products and take them back after use for the purpose of value recovery and redistribution. Post-use design strategies like reuse, remanufacturing, and recycling become highly relevant for the CE implementation process as they practically enable loop closure and influence cost and emissions of operational value recovery. These circumstances bring manufacturing companies to an uncertain position when it comes to CE approaches since the potentials of their product design in combination with new (circular) business models are not known

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