• Events
    • Business Breakfasts
    • Ultimate Masterclass Festival
    • Northern Star Business Awards
    • Speed networking
    • Maximise your membership
    • Photo gallery
    • All events
  • Training
    • Management and leadership
    • Finance
    • Business skills
    • International business
    • Digital marketing
    • All courses
  • News
    • Latest news
    • Blogs & opinion
    • Business Bulletin
    • Morning Bulletin
    • ChamberTalk
    • Advertise with us
  • Import / Export
    • Customs broker
    • Certificates of origin
    • ATA Carnets
    • T1 transit documents
    • Letters of credit
    • Legalisation of documents
  • Economic development
    • Our policy priorities
    • Political engagement
    • Policy Chamber
    • Buchan Rail Campaign
    • Investment Tracker
    • Energy Transition Survey
    • North Sea Transition Taskforce
    • Scotland's Urban AGE
    • Quarterly Economic Survey
    • 2024 General Election Manifesto
  • Research
    • Market research
    • Industry research
    • Consumer insights
    • Employee engagement
    • Impact assessments
    • Feasibility studies
    • Our approach
    • Our recent work
  • Join AGCC
  • Member Zone
  • About
    • Meet the team
    • Join our team
    • Premier partners
  • Contact

Blog: Going circular?

  • August 2, 2018
Blog: Going circular?

Blog post by: Neil Clapperton, chief executive of Grampian Housing Association

As with many things, the first encounter with this circular economy malarkey was a YouTube video. I have seen so many since, I can’t actually remember what it was. At various points I can recall Mexicans making houses out of bottles, Scots turning plastic into roads, a seven year old entrepreneur recycling his way into the record books, and Swedes opening a cyclical mall, repairing and re-using just about everything in sight. All very arresting images. There was also a book, Cradle to Cradle, which I never got around to reading.

It’s a zeitgeist thing. Since saintly David Attenborough showed us how plastic the world’s oceans are, I can’t do anything without thinking about the planet; not brushing my teeth, nor buying spuds. The Association’s tenants have consciences too; a third of them told us they wanted Grampian’s help with recycling when we surveyed them recently. So it was with genuine excitement that I spotted Aberdeen and Grampian Chamber of Commerce making Terri Vogt lead for the Circular North-east.

Our linear economy is about “take, make and dispose”, and it works when it is cheap and raw materials easy to come by. Having seen the consequences and spotted the cash pouring down the drain, it’s not looking too bright. So what does the alternative look like?

Like most folk, I thought that going circular was just about recycling but it is way more complicated. It’s actually about not wasting value, as we do now in disgusting quantity. So the first step is not to produce waste at all, hence the campaign to stop high street chains and supermarkets covering everything in single use plastics. Then there is reuse. If things work and you don’t want to hold on to them, there’s Gumtree, a charity shop, or the architectural salvage yard. If there isn’t a demand, we can re-engineer or remanufacture for a related use. Check out those Swedes: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=id9I9o6yxC8 .

Why not repair? It can be achieved in many different ways, including changing how you deliver services or goods, for instance by switching to a lease model rather than sale.

The City had some early successes through the charity CFINE, and some private enterprises that are still going strong, with a focus on metals, composting, or food redistribution. Some enterprises have taken to anaerobic digestion, using bacteria to turn organic waste into methane and in turn, heat and power. Way down the list, and fractionally above landfill, as the last resort for anyone, we have incineration. Oh dear, it just feels like abject defeat, burning stuff. The local councils are committed to plunge £150m into it, but the YouTube world I see suggests a very different way, full of ideas, enterprise and wealth, and one fit for the new century.

The Scottish Government reckons that we lose billions a year by burning waste or consigning it to a hole in the ground, or the sea. From a resource perspective, the current economic model doesn’t make sense. It is not sustainable.

I met Terri at the Chamber with other business leaders last week to talk about how to get SMEs and social enterprises interested in going circular. It’s a big ask to reimagine your business model and change the supply chain, or start a new circular business but there’s a planet at stake plus government grant and advice to get you started. The community groups I have spoken to are up for it too, and if Grampian’s tenants are anything to go by, there’s the interest and the good will across the peoples of this region to make “circular” work. As Terri said, “This is about growing the North-east economy, diversification of businesses and innovation to identify new business opportunities.” Surely this is something both Councillors and citizens can unite behind.

Share this page

·

Don't just join, join in

Being a member of Aberdeen & Grampian Chamber of Commerce can bring significant value to your business. Talk to us today to find out more.

Join us
British Chambers of Commerce Living Wage Foundation Young persons guarantee
The Hub, Exploration Drive
Aberdeen Energy Park, Bridge of Don
Aberdeen, AB23 8GX
info@agcc.co.uk 01224 343900

© AGCC · Legal notices