André Veneman, Corporate Director Sustainability & HSE, AkzoNobel
In this world of constrained resources, businesses across the globe are working hard to become much more efficient and to minimize waste. Although progress is being made by
some, the reality is that the world is still terribly inefficient.
We have become very good at working efficiently within silos, in very specialist processes, but we fail to spot opportunities
across different systems. We simply don’t ask ourselves the right
questions – would someone else want this waste product? Could
we harness it as a power resource? Could it be used somewhere
else in the cycle?
Unfortunately, because our economy has been built on the
false notion that there is an endless supply of cheap materials these questions often go unasked. According to the Ellen
MacArthur Foundation, the adoption of circular business models in the EU manufacturing sector could realize net materials
cost savings worth up to 630 billion p.a. towards 2025—
stimulating economic activity in the areas of product development,
remanufacturing and refurbishment.
Our current model of becoming more efficient incrementally
will not be enough to realize these savings. Furthermore, it is
anticipated that rare earth materials, such as indium needed
for smartphone touch screens, europium used for light bulbs
and erbium, which is essential for fiber optics, are all due to
be exhausted within 5-10 years. A radical change in mindset is
therefore required.
We need to dismiss the whole concept of waste and think
about entire operating systems. Every liter of water can be re-used; every vegetable leaf can be used as food or as biomass for
energy. Ultimately it’s not about using less and less but about
thinking in a completely different way to find a new cycle that
works. This requires us to see value in every material that we
use. This is not about corporate social responsibility but about
good business sense as a scarcity of raw materials, combined
with a rapidly growing global middle class, puts pressure on our
current linear model.
Moving to a more circular model allows a company to keep
the value of its stock of raw materials within its own system.
For example Desso, which makes carpets and artificial grass, is
already experiencing the benefits of this through a combination
of leasing out its products and making them easily recyclable.
A circular model also provides incentives to create products that are longer lasting. At AkzoNobel because we supply
coatings as a service, we design for longevity. Our outdoor and
indoor paints are designed to last to reduce both maintenance
costs and environmental impact. Furthermore, our coatings
work hard to protect the integrity of the original substrate to
ensure it can be reused effectively.
This circular thinking can’t just be restricted to a company’s
own operations. Due to the complex nature of global value chains
it needs to run across to customers, suppliers, business partners and
communities. If our customers want to produce products that can
be 100 percent re-used and recycled we should think how we can
help our customers to design these. Ultimately if this approach is to
reach scale, we will need to take a systems-based approach.
What all companies who support the circular economy are
certain about is that the current system will at some point have
to dramatically change – and so those companies which find
early solutions, will stand to benefit.
At AkzoNobel we know only too well that our future hinges
on our ability to do radically more with less. But our story is
an optimistic one – we are determined to turn what is an obvious challenge into an opportunity and bring more value to our
customers and society in general. We call this approach Planet
Possible – it’s our commitment to finding opportunities where
there don’t appear to be any. CW
Radical Resource Efficiency
Requires a New Mindset –
There is No Such Thing as Waste
“Moving to a more circular
model allows a company to
keep the value of raw materials
within its own system.”