Remake, Reuse, Repair, Recycle
Full course description
One of the great challenges of our time is to transition away from a linear to a circular economy for both biological (“renewable”) and technical (“finite”) materials. The current make-use-dispose needs to be replaced by circular loops that keep these resources in the system as long as possible. To this end, loops of circular economy have been proposed for both systems.
In essence, once a product (composed of materials) is in the market, creating circularity is achieved by first extending as much as possible the effective use of the product (Share, out of scope for this course) or the product lifetime (Maintain/Prolong and Refurbish/Remanufacture). When this has reached its maximum capacity, only then should we allow the product to go to end-of-life, at which point we keep the materials in the system via Recycle. These loops correspond to 3 of the “Rs” which are the topics of this course, namely Reuse, Repair and Recycle respectively. The fourth R is found at start-of-life, before the product is even made and is Remake (sometimes called Redesign), which considers how to make new products more suitable for the Circular Economy. In this course, we will explore the meaning and implications of these four Rs and apply them via several industrial case studies.
Course objectives
At the end of this course, we expect you to be able to:
- Understand and explain to others the basics of the circular economy for technical materials
- Analyze a product’s current fit to the circular economy and select one of the 4 R pathways to improve this, taking most recent developments into account.
- Justify your choice with up-to-date technical and scientific arguments.
- Connect non-engineering aspects (such as economic/ environmental cost, societal impacts) to an engineering challenge and as such grasp the extent
Recommended reading
For context, it is recommended to explore the Ellen MacArthur Foundation Learning Hub (https://archive.ellenmacarthurfoundation.org/explore ). Topics of particular interest include:
o What is the Circular Economy
o The Circular Economy in detail
o Fashion and the Circular Economy
o Plastics and the Circular Economy
o Circular Design
o Systems and the Circular Economy
Literature related to the lectures and industrial cases will be distributed during the relevant sessions.