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The Only Recap You Need to Wrap Up Your Week
March 15, 2019
The Only Recap You Need to Wrap Up Your Week

Couldn't make it to Beyond Next, the Circularity Festival, last month? We compiled all key insights and highlights from the event so you don't miss out!

In a Nutshell

beyond next stats

Circle Economy and the Amsterdam Fashion Institute (AMFI) welcomed a host of circularity frontrunners to Amsterdam on February 7th and 9th for Beyond Next, the circularity festival. Beyond Next brought together a great mix of industry professionals and the next generation of young talent for two days of speeches, panel discussions and workshops. We are especially grateful to our four partners, ABN AMRO, HEMA, the City of Amsterdam, and Nationale Postcode Loterij for making the festival a big success! Check out key facts and figures about the festival here!

Circular + Collaborative Innovation in Action

Circular + Collaborative Innovation in Action
Circular + Collaborative Innovation in Action
Beyond next graph

The festival also hosted four challenges on themes of urgent importance and global relevance. Within the course of two days, multidisciplinary groups of experts and ambitious students knuckled down and combined their brainpower in an intense circular economy hackathon to develop 12 new solutions to key circularity challenges. The four solutions that won over the jury were presented on stage at the festival and are due to be implemented by challenge partners ABN AMRO, AMFI, HEMA and the City of Amsterdam over the next year. From renting your children's toys to closing the loop on organic waste for Amsterdam's food businesses, these ideas have tremendous potential to advance to the circular economy. Click through to learn more about all twelve solutions here!

New Mindsets Needed

New Mindsets Needed

At Beyond Next, more than 40 speakers joined our keynote sessions and panel discussions - a sequence of inspiring, motivational, and at times jaw-dropping speeches on themes related to the circular economy and sustainability. Our plenary session kicked off with a keynote speech from Kate Raworth, self-described ‘renegade economist’ and bestselling author of Doughnut Economics. She made a passionate advocate for the circular economy, urging a cognitive shift from the 20th-century extractive mindset to a new 21st-century generative mindset. Learn more about what it takes to shift to such a mindset here!

keynote sessions and panel discussions
keynote sessions and panel discussions

When it comes to building circular business models, the key actors in companies and capital markets often experience what has been described as a split heart. What is a viable pace of change? Is there a certain ‘trade-off’ between divergent values? Is it possible to reconcile maximum (often short-term) financial returns and doing the right thing? Frans van Houten, CEO of Philips; Carola Wijdoogen, Corporate Sustainability Officer of Dutch rail operator NS; and Martin Stuchtey the founder of consulting firm Systemiq, joined us on stage to make the practical case for circular business models.

Relieve the inspiration and action:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0nmV_himZOI

Beyond Next 2019

Browse through the livestream here:
All about the Doughnut and Circularity in practice!
Megatrends and solutions
Business opportunities in Circularity
The Circular Economy mindset and Fashion beyond growth
The way forward: How to move ahead & beyond

Interested in participating in the next edition of Beyond Next? Contact us!

Watch this space for more key learnings from the festival! Please, stay in the loop!

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Circular solutions to key challenges come out of Beyond Next, the circularity festival
March 13, 2019
Circular solutions to key challenges come out of Beyond Next, the circularity festival

With our partners ABN AMRO, AMFI, HEMA and the City of Amsterdam, the festival jointly hosted four challenges on themes of urgent importance: promoting access over ownershipthe role of fashion educationsingle-use plastics, and organic waste recovery.

In preparation for the event, from December 19 to January 21, we crowdsourced more than 400 ideas and insights from a global community of students, citizens, entrepreneurs, and countless other industry professionals. The Circle Economy team identified and clustered all submissions into key areas of opportunity that served to inspire and support the development of new solutions at the Beyond Next challenge workshops.

Below are the four solutions that were presented on stage at the festival:

“HEMAWAY”: Party-as-a-service

HEMAWAY
Source: Pexels

The Problem

This is the story of why Balloons Blow and Straws Suck. 3/4 of three to twelve year old kids in the Netherlands throw a birthday party every year. Because most of the party necessities out there today are made of single-use plastic, these parties produce an estimated one million kilos of plastic waste. The production of this amount of plastic alone creates the same CO2 emissions as a full Boeing 787 flying between Amsterdam and New York 25 times!

The Solution

What if HEMA would provide us with the opportunity to rent a party? This would not only be good news for the environment, it would also be a great service. Imagine — you go to HEMA’s website, and you just order the party you like: a kid’s birthday party, a BBQ party, a HEMA wedding! Of course you can customise your party: you pick your kid’s favourite theme, such as “Princess”, “Badman” or “Ajax”, and you click on what you need, and on the amount you need: 6 banners, 25 cups, 15 plates, 10 dresses, 10 hats, 50 balloons. You can get it delivered, or you can pick it up yourself at a HEMA in your neighbourhood. At the end of the day you just put all the cutlery and party props back in a box, and you have it brought back to HEMA.

Check out the other solutions that were developed at Beyond Next for this challenge on Circle Lab >

“Toybox”: Toys-as-a-service

Toybox
Source: Pexels

The Problem

On average, children have 70+ toys and parents spend over €6,000 on toys over the lifetime of their kids. Children demand different toys at different age levels, and the experience is that they outgrow their toys quickly. Next to this, many kids have a few favourite toys and the majority of their 70+ toys is never used. A real cost to the environment.

The Solution

To save the environment, to unburden parents and free up space in the house and to shift mindsets as early as possible, Toybox provides a toys-as-a-service proposition where parents can subscribe to starting from €20 a month. Storage, logistics, cleaning, refurbishing/repair when needed is all taken care of by Toybox. Parents can decide themselves how long they would like to keep a certain toy. Both online and via pop-up location toy exchanging can take place. Sharing toys will teach children the circular mindset!

Check out the other solutions that were developed at Beyond Next for this challenge on Circle Lab >

Leadership Learning Circle: “We’d like our students back now, thank you very much”

For current and next generation fashion professionals (AMFI students, AMFI staff and AMFI alumni), who are lacking the latest knowledge on circularity and sustainability, and the skills to put that knowledge into practice, the Leadership Learning Circle is a training and re-training programme that builds leadership skills and expertise on circular innovation, via workshops, masterclasses, field trips and real life case studies.

Leadership Learning Circle

The Problem

Neither students, teachers nor present day fashion professionals are equipped to deal with the new fashion reality. We must all go back to school. Instead of siloed efforts to educate and re-educate, we should be conducting this future-proof training at once, with students, staff and fashion professionals around the same table. In addition to hard skills and content knowledge, we also recognised that leadership skills are critically needed to activate this new found expertise in a practical way and incite change within a project, classroom, or brand.

The Solution

The LLC will combine the two. The LLC is an intensive 1-year programme in AMFI that jointly retrains a collective of students, educators and fashion industry professionals, therefore enabling life-long learning. The reality school concept remains core to the programme, as students and staff will be imbedded in the brands that are participating (1 day per week) and the fashion professionals will be embedded in AMFI (1 day per week). In addition, the group will ‘learn by doing’ through continual experiential field trips and masterclasses.

Check out the other solutions that were developed at Beyond Next for this challenge on Circle Lab >

Afval Afhaal Amsterdam: Return logistics pick up service for juice waste

Afval Afhaal Amsterdam
Source: Afval Afhaal Amsterdam and Pexels

The Problem

70% of restaurants throw out 50% of their organic waste, 65% of food SMEs in Amsterdam don’t know how to close the loop, and, according the the AMEC, the number of small scale food associated producers are rapidly increasing.

The Solution

To connect supply and demand, divert organic waste, and close the loop on organic waste for Amsterdam’s small independent food businesses by 2025, Afval Afhaal (“Waste Collection”) uses local street sweepers (an existing infrastructure in Amsterdam) to pick up organic waste from small scale food producers and SMEs and deliver it to producers who need it. An online database or marketplace enables registered businesses to list their resources and find raw materials for their own production, and incentive schemes with partnering organisations would encourage adoption.

Check out the other solutions that were developed at Beyond Next for this challenge on Circle Lab >

We are currently developing roadmaps for each of these solutions with our challenge partners and will keep you up to date on progress made over the next year through Circle Lab, but we encourage you to start your own project around one of these themes!

Keen to work on one of these ideas in your own city? Get in touch with us! >

Check out the 20 other solutions that were developed at Beyond Next on Circle Lab, under the “Refinement Phase” of each challenge >


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What happened at Beyond Next?
February 26, 2019
What happened at Beyond Next?

Together with the Amsterdam Fashion Institute (AMFI) we welcomed a host of circularity frontrunners to Amsterdam on the 7th and 8th of February during Beyond Next, the first circularity festival.

True to our style, we designed the event with an emphasis on practical steps to accelerate the transition to the circular economy. Beyond Next brought together a great mix of industry professionals and the next generation of young talent for two days of speeches, panel discussions and challenge workshops.

Stats

The festival created a unique blend of inspiration and problem-solving. Half of the 650 tickets were reserved for students, whose contributions made the forum so unique. Our theme of ‘Shifting Mindsets’ attracted wide support. We are especially grateful to our four partners, ABN Amro, HEMA, AMFI and the City of Amsterdam.

The programme kicked off with a series of industry workshops at ABN Amro’s circular ‘living lab’ in Amsterdam’s business district, also known as the Circl in the Zuidas district. The pavilion itself is constructed entirely on circular principles. For example, the insulation consists of fibres re-purposed from 16,000 pairs of old denim jeans donated by the bank’s employees. The lift is leased from the manufacturer on a pay-per-use basis.

The second part of Beyond Next took place at HEMA headquarters in north Amsterdam. In response to the alarming plastic pollution in our oceans, the Dutch retail chain has set itself a mission to become a part of the solution in tackling the problem. HEMA has banned plastic straws, coffee spoons and stirrers from its stores and aims to reduce plastic packaging in their store by 25 per cent in 2025 and 100 per cent recycled or bioplastic in 2025 for all products.

In the same spirit, we wanted to walk the talk at Beyond Next. For our event, we took a number of initiatives to reduce plastic and organic waste from the festival. Catering company Catering Lokaal supported our goals. Not only did they ensure that participants were fuelled by delicious, locally-made and sustainable foods, but they also created an on-site marketplace for leftover ingredients that we could bring home to reduce food waste at the end of the event. Participants were invited to bring their own water bottles to refill, as no bottled water was supplied.

Stage

Beyond Next Festival Learnings

More than 40 speakers joined our keynote sessions and panel discussions — a sequence of inspiring, motivational, and at times jaw-dropping speeches on themes related to the circular economy and sustainability.

Beyond Next Festival Learnings

Kate Raworth, bestselling author of Doughnut Economics, highlighted the importance of shifting from the 20th-century extractive mindset — focused on extracting financial value — to a 21st-century generative mindset focused on qualitative benefits for people and planet.

Stage

Frans van Houten, CEO of Phillips, explained that circular principles have transformed customer relationships in the medical equipment sector. By retaining ownership of its devices, Philips is now in the business of selling benefits instead of machines.

Circular solutions to real-life challenges

With our partners ABN AMRO, AMFI, HEMA and the City of Amsterdam, the festival jointly hosted four challenges on themes of urgent importance to each partner. These were: product-as-a-service, fashion education, single-use plastics, and organic waste in a circular city.

In preparation for the event, from December 19 to January 21, we crowdsourced more than 400 ideas and insights from a global community of students, citizens, entrepreneurs, and countless other industry professionals. The Circle Economy team identified and clustered all submissions into key themes that served to support the development of new solutions at the Beyond Next challenge workshops.

Beyond… Beyond Next!

Once again, we would like to give our heartfelt thanks to all participants for making the circularity festival a huge success. We hope that the ideas generated from Beyond Next will be taken beyond Beyond Next! Watch this space for more on the winning ideas of the workshop challenges, key learnings from the Exploration Track and of course more pictures from the event! Please, stay in the loop!


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Limburg Energy Fund joins Circle Economy
February 19, 2019
Limburg Energy Fund joins Circle Economy

The Limburg Energy Fund (“LEF”), a regional investment fund established by the Province of Limburg, is the first of its kind to join Circle Economy's membership community.

LEF has a mandate to support sustainability in or for Limburg. The fund has received €90 mln from the Province of Limburg and the European Investment Bank. It provides subordinated and senior debt, and equity financing, to projects that contribute to CO2 reduction, renewable energy, energy efficiency, resource efficiency, waste or asbestos reduction.

"We are very proud and happy to welcome LEF as our latest member. They lead by example, currently financing various circular projects. Their ambition, specific circular focus and experience will be of great value for the work we do within Circle Economy"

- Fieke de Haan, Lead Circle Finance Programme

With this mandate, LEF is the first regional investment fund with a specific circular focus, stimulating retention of value from residues of biological, technical and energy cycles and improving the efficient use or re-use of resources.

“The Limburg Energy Fund pledges to contribute to further growth of the circular economy. LEF has financed more than €20 mln in circular projects, mobilizing more than €100 mln in private sector funding. By joining other members of the Circle Economy community, we will share knowledge and hope to step up our financing of circular projects”

-- Philip Tan, Director Limburg Energy Fund

Four examples of circular projects financed by the Limburg Energy Fund

  • Dutch Green Carbon is the 1st circular carbon black production facility, developed by Black Bear Carbon and Kargo Group, blackbearcarbon.com
  • Quality Circular Polymers processes used plastics into virgin quality polymers used for the production of new plastic materials, www.qcpolymers.com
  • Weelec is a company that disassembles electronic waste to mono streams and raw materials that are (re)usable in normal production processes. www.weelec.nl
  • N+P Group retains value from non-recyclable waste streams. The waste is sold as mono stream or processed into raw materials and fuels, for example pellets that replace coal or lignite, www.np-recycling.nl/en
Limburgs Energie Fonds
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Our world is still only 9% circular...
January 23, 2019
Our world is still only 9% circular...

Its time to wake up to the opportunities of the circular economy. In the 12 months since we launched our first Circularity Gap Report, resource extraction and greenhouse gas emissions have continued to increase.

Key indications confirm that the problems of the linear economy are engrained in our global system. We are headed in the wrong direction.

Today we have launched the second annual Circularity Gap Report in which we position the circular economy as a tool for the paradigm shift we so desperately need. It offers the prospect of a global economy which is regenerative and abundant.

   Read more   

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sGZK_uSvjfA

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New financing needed to accelerate circular built environment
January 16, 2019
New financing needed to accelerate circular built environment

The 'Building Value' report launched today demonstrates the radical potential in the built environment to accelerate the circular economy. The industry should re-think how to calculate value in buildings and how to finance them.  

This report identifies key reforms to current methods of valuation and financing to stimulate circular construction. An alternative pathway is mapped from a case study of the Fridtjof Nansenhof social housing project in Amsterdam, due for redevelopment in 2020.

Download the full report

The report is a collaboration between Circle Economy, Sustainable Finance Lab, ING, Allen & Overy, Eigen Haard, The Royal Netherlands Institute of Chartered Accountants (NBA),  Alfa Accountants and Advisors, Madaster, Arcadis, Arup, and DOOR architecten, co-funded by Nederland Circulair! The participants formed a Community of Practice (CoP), to develop relevant, transferable tools to guide circular construction.

Rethinking Construction: one building, six layers

The report argues that each building should be conceived as six individual layers, each with their own lifespan. Applying circular principles, strategies can be developed to maintain the value of each layer.  

Rethinking Construction: one building, six layers

The EPM hierarchy

Value can be maintained within each of the six layers by prioritizing reuse in this order: elements, products, materials (EPM). New business models, such as Product-as-a-Service, enable effective reuse of EPMs.

The EPM hierarchy

Market for reusable elements

Prioritizing reuse will require a developed market for building elements. Technology has enabled actors within the built environment to increasingly collect, store and exchange data. Reliable governance of EPM data is essential to respect privacy, security and transparency.

The business case

Accurate valuation of individual layers and EPMs is key. The Community of Practice conducted a scenario building exercise to compare the long term (financial) performance of circular features for two building layers. The business case is shown to be highly dependent on assumptions for factors including depreciation, discount rates,  lifespan  and market development.

Valuing circular construction

Distinguishing between building layers, when realizing the value on the balance sheet, is necessary to explicitly show the value of layers and EPMs as part of the overall value. The traditional emphasis on location value as part of the total value has eclipsed the importance of building layers and EPMs. These factors should be reported separately on the balance sheet to guide investment decisions.

"Separating location and building elements on the balance sheet should result in a different way of valuing and financing buildings when the developing market for repurposed building elements is more established.”

Jan van der Doelen, Sector Banker Building & Construction, Real Estate at IN

Bringing future value into present financing

Financiers play a crucial role in identifying and mitigating risks in the transition to a circular economy. Circular business models capture value over a longer time horizon, reflected in higher future values. Investment decisions should assess this future value: "The business case of a circular construction project is based on the ambition to reduce our demand for natural resources. If a small extra investment results in increased flexibility of the building in the long-term, then it is a smart investment. This long-term investment vision could be further incentivised if financiers make circular construction an investment criterium.” says Dries Wijte, Manager Back Office Finance at Eigen Haard.  

Next steps

On the 16th of January the Community of Practise hosted an event, inviting industry professionals to further the conversation and challenge the report findings with the market. Several of the CoP partners have already committed to continue to build on the knowledge and support the implementation of a circular built environment.

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Now Open for Contributions: the Beyond Next 2019 Challenges
December 24, 2018
Now Open for Contributions: the Beyond Next 2019 Challenges

Interested in winning a free trip to Amsterdam and attend Beyond Next, including travel and accommodation? Interested in contributing to a circular economy with your research and ideas? Well read on, because we have partnered with Amsterdam Fashion Institute, ABN AMRO, Gemeente Amsterdam and HEMA to run challenges to accelerate the transition to a circular economy.

You can now submit existing research, facts and figures, inspirational examples, and other key insights related to these challenges. The challenges cover four major themes of education, product as a service, organic waste in a circular city, and single use plastics.

We will synthesise and openly share the results of this crowd-based exploration on Circle Lab, the online platform for the circular economy, for everyone to find inspiration in, learn from, and use in developing new solutions.

These results will also support attendees of the Beyond Next Challenge Track as they ideate and prototype new solutions to the challenges throughout the two-day festival.

THE PRIZE

Send in some research and you could win a free trip including entry tickets worth €150 and accommodation and travel expenses up to €1,000!

Eight winners will be chosen based on a combination of the number and the quality of their contributions.

For more information on the challenges and how to contribute, check out the challenges below:

Beyond Ownership >
How can we promote access over ownership in the household? 
Brought to you by ABN AMRO

Beyond Plastics >
How can we transition to a system free of single-use plastics?
Brought to you by HEMA

Beyond Education >
How can fashion education equip students for a ‘new reality’?
Brought to you by the Amsterdam Fashion Institute

Beyond Leftovers >
How can we effectively collect and use organic waste throughout the city?Brought to you by the Gemeente Amsterdam


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Circle Economy presents: all that cities need to know for their circular journey
December 20, 2018
Circle Economy presents: all that cities need to know for their circular journey

Cities and regions hold huge potential for circular disruption. Their secret weapon? Policy! Circle Economy is excited to share 300+ examples of circular policies from over 40+ countries to the Knowledge Hub - the world’s largest open-access case study library of circular initiatives, technologies, and now, policies. By sharing practical examples of circular policies, cities and policymakers throughout the world can share their knowledge and expertise to overcome the barriers towards a circular future. The collection of inspiring cases have been collected in collaboration with ICLEI, and with the support of the Goldschmeding Foundation.

Visit the Knowledge Hub for Cities

Breaking down the barriers to circular knowledge

In 2017, Circle Economy recognised the huge need for a single location that assembles practical knowledge, expertise and example of circular solutions that are proven to work. The solution? The Knowledge Hub - the world’s largest case study database of circular businesses, initiatives - and, now, circular policy is added to that list. The platform provides an open-access platform for cities and policymakers to connect and further share their experience and expertise on circular policy.

Throughout the world, successful circular policies are blooming. Yet, all too often, this knowledge and experiences of these circular policies are held in silos, hidden away. Now, the Knowledge Hub for circular policy aims to break down these walls.

300+ circular cases across 40+ countries

Building upon the policy framework created by the Ellen MacArthur Foundation in 2015, the 300+ circular policies span 25+ policy instruments that are boosting the transition to a circular economy throughout the world; from circular procurement to collaboration platforms; landfill bans to green bonds. To give a taste of some of the innovative circular policies that can be found on the Knowledge Hub, here are three inspiring examples from European cities and regions;

As the recognition of the circular economy continues to grow, globally, so too will the library of circular policies in the Knowledge Hub. Open-access and collaborative, this digital platform will continue to empower and inspire a global community of circular changemakers. We invite cities and policymakers to share their knowledge, experiences and best practices on circular policies to accelerate the transition towards a circular economy.

GOLDSCHMEDING FOUNDATION
I.C.L.E.I
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