Prospects for Transitioning from a Linear to Circular Economy in Developing Asia
A circular economy aims to drive economic growth in a sustainable manner by maximizing resource efficiency while minimizing environmental impacts and greenhouse gas emissions.
Unsustainable consumption, driven by the increasing extraction of raw materials, manufacturing, and production, is contributing to environmental degradation and the acceleration of climate change. In developing Asia, consumption trends will continue to rise as populations and economies grow. Shifting from the current “take–make–dispose” linear consumption pattern to a more circular economy provides an opportunity for governments to rewrite the narrative by decoupling economic output from increased resource use and environmental degradation. A circular economy aims to drive economic growth in a sustainable manner by maximizing resource efficiency while minimizing environmental impacts and greenhouse gas emissions.
Prospects for Transitioning from a Linear to Circular Economy in Developing Asia overviews circular economy principles and provides policy recommendations to promote the transition to circularity. Part I describes the evolution of circular economy in the region and highlights key related initiatives and prospects for future growth. Part II looks at the regulatory and legal frameworks for plastics, such as extended producer responsibility, and assesses their adequacy to stem unsustainable production and minimize the disposal of plastic waste. Part III offers examples of circular economy investment and innovation and calls for effective policies to incentivize and strengthen circular business models.
Contents
- Introduction by Derek Hondo and Linda Arthur
- Part I: Regional and Country Policies for a Circular Economy
- 1. Toward a Regional Circular Economy Policy for East Asia and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations by Michikazu Kojima
- 2. A Road Map to a Circular Economy in Viet Nam by Tho Dinh Nguyen, Manh Van Lai, Huyen Anh Pham, and Hanh Trong Nguyen
- 3. Design-Reality Gap in Promoting a Circular Economy in the Private Sector: Case of Waste Management and Recycling in Bangladesh by Suborna Barua
- Part II: Regulatory and Legal Frameworks for Plastics: Extended Producer Responsibility
- 4. Closing the “Circularity Gaps”: Practical Strategies to Address Key Challenges Undermining the Collective Goal of a Global Circular Economy of Plastics by Nicholas Kolesch, Steve Sikra, and Martyn Tickner
- 5. Circular Economy Policy Initiatives and Experiences in the Philippines: Lessons for Asia and the Pacific and Beyond by Gregorio Rafael P. Bueta
- 6. Extended Producer Responsibility: Lessons for Realizing and Implementing a Circular Economy for Plastics in Asia by Anurodh Sachdeva and Arpit Srivastava
- Part III: Business Cases and Innovations for a Circular Economy
- 7. Circular Economy Financing: Investment Cases from Turkey by Emine Eda Ünal
- 8. The Case of Waste to Energy in Bangladesh by Laura Marsiliani, Sakib Amin, Tooraj Jamasb, Manuel Llorca, and Thomas I. Renström
- Conclusion by Linda Arthur
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