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Building materials in a circular economy

Author

Listed:
  • Dalton, Tony
  • Dorignon, Louise
  • Boehme, Tillmann
  • Kempton, Leela
  • Iyer-Raniga, Usha
  • Oswald, David
  • Amirghasemi, Mehrdad
  • Moore, Trivess

Abstract

This research analyses the supply chains of manufactured building materials used by the residential housing industry so as to assist the housing industry in reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. Understanding the structure of building-material supply chains is essential for policy development seeking to reduce carbon intensity of new material choice and use in the housing industry. This will require the housing industry to rely less on newly made materials and more on the reuse, recycling and resource recovery of ‘used’ materials, which will involve an efficient and responsive ‘used’ materials markets. The designers of the two presented case studies recognised the issues that challenge movement towards circularity, specifically the financial cost of planning for building disassembly at the end-of-life; and how costs restricted the choice of lower-carbon materials and alternative construction methods. The recovery and reuse of building materials is difficult in the absence of regulation; underpricing of landfill; the absence of markets; poor waste-stream data collection; and designs that do not support material end-of-life recovery. The research identified a number of key areas for policy development, including building materials data collection and analysis; incentivising disassembly and reuse; regulation to support housing-system decarbonisation, including supporting reuse, rethink, repurpose or remanufacture; tilting investment flows towards CE outcomes; expanding the pool of people with a knowledge of CE education, training and skill development; and establishing housing-industry supply-chain councils to develop supply-chain decarbonisation plans.

Suggested Citation

  • Dalton, Tony & Dorignon, Louise & Boehme, Tillmann & Kempton, Leela & Iyer-Raniga, Usha & Oswald, David & Amirghasemi, Mehrdad & Moore, Trivess, 2023. "Building materials in a circular economy," SocArXiv uryxz_v1, Center for Open Science.
  • Handle: RePEc:osf:socarx:uryxz_v1
    DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/uryxz_v1
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Ronny Meglin & Susanne Kytzia & Guillaume Habert, 2022. "Regional circular economy of building materials: Environmental and economic assessment combining Material Flow Analysis, Input‐Output Analyses, and Life Cycle Assessment," Journal of Industrial Ecology, Yale University, vol. 26(2), pages 562-576, April.
    2. Laubinger, Frithjof & Lanzi, Elisa & Chateau, Jean, 2020. "Labour Market Consequences of a Transition to a Circular Economy: A Review Paper," International Review of Environmental and Resource Economics, now publishers, vol. 14(4), pages 381–416-3, December.
    3. Pedro Nuñez-Cacho & Jaroslaw Górecki & Valentín Molina-Moreno & Francisco A. Corpas-Iglesias, 2018. "What Gets Measured, Gets Done: Development of a Circular Economy Measurement Scale for Building Industry," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 10(7), pages 1-22, July.
    4. Frithjof Laubinger & Elisa Lanzi & Jean Chateau, 2020. "Labour market consequences of a transition to a circular economy: A review paper," OECD Environment Working Papers 162, OECD Publishing.
    5. Gurran, Nicole & Rowley, Steven & Milligan, Vivienne & Randolph, Bill & Phibbs, Peter & Gilbert, Catherine & James, Amity & Troy, Laurence & van den Nouwelant, Ryan & Hayward, Richard Donald, 2018. "Inquiry into increasing affordable housing supply: Evidence-based principles and strategies for Australian policy and practice," SocArXiv mt5vw, Center for Open Science.
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