SMART CITY MIAMI®Magazine - SUSTAINABLE CITIES EXPERIENCES

Page 81

CIRCLE SCAN BY JORDI PASCUAL

How cities can use data evidence to inform their innovation process and the circular economy.

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ircle Economy is an impact organization dedicated to the practical and scalable implementation of the circular economy. Our mission is to deliver practical and scalable circular economy solutions to businesses, cities, and nations but also provide insights and research to the wider public across all these different agents. Our vision is to contribute to a prosperous world with finite resources by accelerating the transition toward the circular economy. What Is the Circular Economy? We are trying to transition from the linear economy, where we waste most of the sources that we extract, manufacture, and consume, toward a circular economy where we capture the value of resources without generating any waste. The reality is that our world is only 8.6% circular, and the trend is going down. The linear economy is about this process of sourcing resources, refining them, producing, selling, using them, and disposing of them via incineration or landfilling. In a circular economy, resources are maintained at their highest utility. We value those resources for as long as possible by closing the loops, keeping products in the use phase, reusing them, refurbishing them, and, as a last option, recycling them. At Circle Economy, we have the seven key elements framework, which summarizes all the different strategies that compose the circular economy: regenerative resources, preserving and extending what’s already made, reusing or using waste as a resource. Those are the core elements. But we also have the enabling elements such as design, rethinking the business models, collaboration, and incorporation of digital technologies. Half of the global population lives in urban areas, two-thirds of global energy is used in

cities, 80% of global GDP is generated in cities, and 75% of global resources are used in cities. We see the potential of circular cities for value creation, job creation, better air quality, competitiveness in global markets, and reduction of CO2 emissions and resource use. We see circular cities as the drivers for resilience in our society, and the circular economy is a key lever in bridging the emissions gap to a 1.5° pathway. Circle City Scans The Circle City Scan is an action-oriented approach to help build road maps for circular economy projects. We use analytical tools and assessments to translate the complexity of data and resource flows into understandable insights that can provide information for cities to make decisions. Then we identify the key impact areas are and where the opportunities might be to overcome those impacts. We like to call it a multi-stakeholder approach. We bring together local changemakers and stakeholders from businesses, academia, the public sector, research institutes, and civil society so that they own the process. Our Circle City Scan approach has four main phases: Socioeconomic Analysis: We engage with a group of key stakeholders and develop a baseline analysis of the current state of the circular economy. Material Flow Analysis: We try to build an evidence-based analysis to identify the main challenges in the different sectors. Circular Strategies: We try to develop actionable circular strategies and define scalable pilot projects to test if those strategies can work on a city level. Action Plan: We develop the pilot projects’ action plans. What actions need to be taken, by whom, what’s the type of investment, what’s the financial investment needed, and what steps need to be taken?

Jordi Pascual City Strategist, Circle Economy Amsterdam, Netherlands Jordi Pascual is driven by systemic transformation and creating a new economic model that delivers prosperity within the boundaries of our planet. In his role as a strategist in Circle Economy’s cities team, he works with cities to analyze their socioeconomic system, scope their opportunities, and realize innovative, practical, and impactful circular economy strategies.

Circular London In our recent Circle City Scan of London, we linked the circular economy to consumptionbased emissions. We called it a Carbon Scan because it tried to link carbon to resources and climate change. London has set the target to become a zero-carbon city by 2030 and is tackling consumption-based emissions. First, we did some baseline assessment and analysis to understand the sector, and we then mapped the resources flows and the supply chain and how those link to emissions and carbon impacts. We found that 15.5 million tons of CO2-equivalent emissions are being emitted via London’s food system—the same as the energy use of about 1.8 million houses for a year. About 78% of greenhouse gas emissions of London’s food system occur outside of London. And more than 1 million tons is the total food loss and waste before reaching households. We looked at how the circular economy could help in reducing consumptionbased emissions and improving resource management. We found three key intervention points: 1) Reducing meat consumption by 20% can decrease food-related consumptionbased emissions by 20%; 2) Reducing food loss and waste by 50% can decrease emissions by 10%; and 3) making better use of waste can decrease emissions by an additional 0.4%. Smart City Miami | 81


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Articles inside

Investing in Racial Equity Through Small-Scale Manufacturing

11min
pages 82-88

Circle Scan

4min
page 81

Entrepreneurship for Sustainability

3min
page 80

Urban Playground: How Child-Friendly Planning & Design Can Save Cities

3min
page 78

Humans + Nature + Mindfulness Resilient Sustainable Cities

3min
page 77

Creating Child-Friendly Smart Cities

3min
page 79

Architects as Healers: Buildings as Medicine

6min
pages 74-75

Health Tech Will Make Smart Cities Smarter

3min
page 76

Visual Utopias

3min
page 73

Pocket Parks

4min
page 72

Claiming Safe Streets for Livable Cities

4min
pages 70-71

America’s Top 100 Bicycling Cities

6min
pages 66-67

Where Are Self-Driving Cars Taking Us?

3min
page 68

Smart Design in Dutch Cities

3min
page 69

Urban Mobility: Bicycles, E-Cargo Bikes & the City

7min
pages 64-65

Building the Future of Sustainable Government

7min
pages 62-63

Water as Leverage for Sustainable Development

5min
pages 54-55

Financing Green Resilient Urban Infrastructure

4min
page 61

Miami and South Florida in 2050 A Dispatch from the Future

3min
page 59

Living Seawalls: Bringing Marine Life Back to Concrete Coastlines

3min
page 60

Integrating Equity into Climate Planning

3min
page 58

Transforming Streets to Adapt to Climate Change

2min
page 56

Choosing Change: How Bold Mindsets Will Save the World

4min
page 57

If We Act Together: Keeping 1.5ºC Alive

5min
pages 52-53

Next-Generation Infrastructure & Sustainable Mobility for Smart Cities

2min
page 51

Smart and Resilient Cities Tools for City Leadership

3min
page 49

Digital Twin: Collaborative Subsurface Infrastructure

3min
page 50

Greening Our Gray Cities with Nature-Based Solutions

6min
pages 46-47

Investing in the Future Smart and Sustainable Tourism

4min
page 48

Bangkok: Porous City

1min
pages 44-45

Transforming the City

3min
page 43

The Race to Resilience

3min
page 42

The Future of Work Civic Innovation in the New Economy

8min
pages 28-29

Kyiv Smart City: Digital Infrastructure

6min
pages 40-41

Coral Gables Resilient Smart Districts

5min
pages 32-33

Future City: Resilient by Data Adoptive by Design

3min
page 34

Better Governance, Better Livelihood, Better Industry

7min
pages 36-37

The Case for an Innovation Agenda that Is Social in Nature

6min
pages 30-31

Smart & Sustainable Urbanism

3min
page 35

Digital Transformation with Sustainable Standards

6min
pages 38-39

Why Mayors Should Rule the World

8min
pages 18-19

Why It Is Time to Reevaluate the Function of a City

6min
pages 26-27

Smart Cities Are Resilient Cities

6min
pages 20-21

Miami: Sustainable & Resilient

4min
pages 14-15

The Need for Developing Nations’ Model of Smart Cities

3min
page 24

Miami-Dade County: Climate Action

6min
pages 16-17

The Emergence of a Human-Centric Data-Driven Community

5min
pages 22-23

Innovation Guerilla Against Bureaucracy

3min
page 25
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