Circular economy - how it works! (Example)
7 February, 2012 in Cradle to Cradle / Circular Economy
How can a circular economy work? Yes, such as business "The Variable Project ', which Graham Wiles began - with the help of junk.
He created a circular economic system, reminiscent of nature's own ecosystem where nothing goes to waste, unlike our traditional system that works linearly, that is where we do not use become waste. Here is a linear functional system of an ordinary restaurant out. The streams of garbage are organized in a very simple linear fashion with a straight flow of resources directly to the ordinary - a rubbish dump.
Chart A: The linear system.
Graham Wiles project began in an area where there were several restaurants in Wakefield in the UK. He worked with the green network 'Green Business Network, "and at first engaged Graham Wiles in a traditional, easy recovery work, where he again won the rubbish restaurants produced. Food scraps went into compost, plastic to plastic recycling station - but the cardboard boxes that the packaged food came in, he chose to regard as an asset. The cartons shredded and sold to an equestrian center to be used as bedding for the horses there (litter spread on the stall floor to collect the horses' urine and feces). When the shredded cardboard had been mixed with horses' manure, litter was perfect for compost. Graham Wiles gathered up the compost and started a worm rearing. At first he sold worms for fishing bait to a fish store, but they backed out. Being a resourceful person, he decided then to start a fish farm. He started a youth program, working with young former heroin addicts. But as he thought in terms of circular economy, he did not just start up the fish at any time but he chose to breed sturgeon, which would eventually produce caviar, which later came to be sold at gourmet shops and at the same restaurants where he had collected the boxes together.
Chart B: The circular system.
Apart from fish farming were other opportunities in the area that allowed:
The first Graham Wiles was able to buy fertilizer from plants to a water treatment plant nearby, and with the help of the cultivated he is a willow grove. Of those, he started a biomass production, which he used to run the farm, which thus run without carbon emissions.
The second He also planted trees at an orchard, and with the help of fruit sales, he received more revenue for their program.
The third He could grow vegetables, which he used to food and to teach young people healthy living.
Graham Wiles ambition was that just as the ecosystem to create a closed circular system, where waste from one organism becomes food for another. At each step of the way managed to Graham get the system to be in a continuous cycle where no garbage that was not used was emitted. He was given a low valued materials - cardboard - to become a highly valued - caviar, while he earned money down the road, some of which went to the youth program. Additionally kept 96 percent of the adolescents who took part in the program away from drugs afterwards, as opposed to government programs, where only 5 percent had fewer relapses.
- Compiled by Anna Maria Orru, a British architect who also works with circular economy and "closed circular metabolism" or the closed circular metabolism.
Learn more about The Able Project:
http://www.theableproject.org.uk/
More on Anna Maria Orru, Arch ARB RIBA Architect / Research Curator
SCENE - thinking amo@scene-thinking.com www.scene-thinking.com and www.annamariaorru.com


