Try GOLD - Free
THE CIRCULARITY ARGUMENT
Down To Earth
|February 01, 2025
A circular economy can help India achieve its developmental aspirations while following the low-carbon pathway. It will also help address the challenges of waste management, pollution and overexploitation of natural resources. Industries are already innovating to reuse high-volume wastes and have shown that the transition can usher in both environmental and financial windfalls
STRAY PAPER hangs on every bush, flutters in every tree, is caught flying by the electric wires, haunts every enclosure. Since Charles Dickens wrote these words in Our Mutual Friend, published in the 1860s, the world's waste problem has changed in both scale and composition. These days, sprawling rubbish mountains have altered natural landscapes; toxic chemicals have invaded ecosystems; pollutants like black carbon have choked the ambient air. These ever-increasing loads of wastes are harming people and the environment, rendering farmlands barren, and endangering species.
A large chunk of the wastes are by-products of industrial activities, vital to modern economies and technological progress. In other words, these wastes are the fallout of the way our economies have evolved-in a linear fashion, where manufacturing extracts the limited natural resources from the environment and turns them into products which are used and then disposed of into the environment, along with the waste generated during the making process. It does not have to be this way.
In the past decade, global focus has shifted towards a circular economy, which works on the principle that waste is not only a waste but a resource.
In Europe, where the quantum of goods recycled is as high as 70 per cent, the European Parliament defines circular economy as a model of production and consumption that involves circularity (sharing, leasing, reusing, repairing, refurbishing and recycling) of existing materials and products for as long as possible. The purpose behind this shift is multi-fold: it can eliminate waste and promote economic growth, while taking the pressure off natural resources and reducing carbon emissions across supply chains.
This story is from the February 01, 2025 edition of Down To Earth.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Down To Earth
Down To Earth
BEYOND COLLATERAL DAMAGE
Recent geopolitical conflicts are urging a reconsideration of what constitutes environmental harm in war and the limits of existing legal frameworks
3 mins
April 01, 2026
Down To Earth
Masterstroke
Residents of a small Kerala town reject an inadequate state-led development blueprint and create their own master plan that prioritises protection of historic water systems and urban commons
4 mins
April 01, 2026
Down To Earth
Rethinking E20
It is pertinent to explore potential of ethanol as high-value industrial feedstock
4 mins
April 01, 2026
Down To Earth
Food in the age of climate change
WHEN WE eat, we contribute to climate change. But food is also about livelihoods, about nutrition and about nature.
3 mins
April 01, 2026
Down To Earth
FADING WINTER
India's winters are warming, becoming shorter, shifting and spilling beyond their traditional bounds. The consequences are already evident in meltwater availability, forest-fire intensity and changes in flowering cycles and insect behaviour.
20 mins
April 01, 2026
Down To Earth
War on Iran strikes India's pharmaceuticals sector
Shortages of critical raw materials and rising input costs for the drug industry will have global consequences
4 mins
April 01, 2026
Down To Earth
POWER IN AN AGE OF INSECURITY
Energy transition is no longer solely about emission reduction but also about energy security
3 mins
April 01, 2026
Down To Earth
Re-discovery of fuelwood
THE WEST Asia conflict has made visible a multi-billion dollar energy market in India.
2 mins
April 01, 2026
Down To Earth
A CASE THAT RESHAPED INDIA'S ENVIRONMENT
The case of MC Mehta v Union of India stands as proof that a proactive judiciary can accelerate action even when the executive drags its feet
4 mins
April 01, 2026
Down To Earth
FOREVER DEPENDENT
India depends on global fertiliser supply chains for 70 per cent of its needs, leaving its food security exposed to geopolitical disruptions
6 mins
April 01, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
