4.6 Article

Dematerialization and the Circular Economy: Comparing Strategies to Reduce Material Impacts of the Consumer Electronic Product Ecosystem

Journal

JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL ECOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages 119-132

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jiec.12756

Keywords

circular economy; community ecology; dematerialization; electronics; material flow analysis; product ecosystem

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [CBET-1236447]
  2. Golisano Institute for Sustainability at Rochester Institute of Technology

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The rapid technological evolution and adoption of consumer electronics highlights a growing need for adaptive methodologies to evaluate material consumption at the intersection of technological change and increasing consumption. While dematerialization and the circular economy (CE) have both been proposed to mitigate increasing material consumption, recent research has shown that these methods may be ineffective at achieving net material use reduction: When focused on specific products, these methods neglect the effects of complex interactions among and increasing consumption of consumer electronic products. The research presented here develops and applies a material flow analysis aimed at evaluating an entire product ecosystem, thereby including the effects of increasing consumption, product trade-offs, and technological innovations. Results are then used to evaluate the potential efficacy of natural dematerialization (occurring as technology advances or smaller products substitute for larger ones) and CE (closing the loop between secondary material supply and primary material demand). Results show that material consumption by the ecosystem of electronics commonly used by U.S. households peaked in 2000. This consumption relies on increasingly diverse materials, including gold, cobalt, and indium, for whom secondary supply is still negligible, particularly given low recovery rates, often less than 1%. Potential circularity metrics of material dilution, dispersion, and demand mismatch are also evaluated, and indicate that CE approaches aimed at closing the loop on consumer electronic material still face several critical barriers particularly related to design and efficient recycling infrastructure.

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