4.7 Article

Integrating the green economy, circular economy and bioeconomy in a strategic sustainability framework

Journal

ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS
Volume 188, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2021.107143

Keywords

Ecosystem services; Low carbon economy; Nature-positive economy; Sharing economy; Sustainability transitions; System thinking

Funding

  1. Academy of Finland [315912]
  2. KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Sweden
  3. Circular Economy at KTH Initiative (CE@KTH)
  4. Academy of Finland (AKA) [315912, 315912] Funding Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)

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The green economy, circular economy, and bioeconomy are popular narratives in sustainability discussions, offering different approaches to address economic, social, and ecological goals. While individually they may not provide comprehensive solutions, collectively they point towards a society and economy based on renewable resources and biodiversity, fulfilling the needs of current and future generations. Further research on potential competing or supplementary sustainability narratives is needed for holistic and integrative sustainability transformations.
The green economy, circular economy and bioeconomy are popular narratives in macro-level sustainability discussions in policy, scientific research and business. These three narratives offer three different recipes to address economic, social and ecological goals, thus promoting different pathways for sustainability transformations. We employ the well-known Framework for Strategic Sustainable Development (The Natural Step Framework) to comparatively identify the relative and integrated contribution of the three narratives for global net sustainability. We conclude that none of the three narratives, individually, offer a comprehensive 'package' of solutions. However, when considered jointly as collaborative narratives, they point towards a society and economy based on renewable/reproductive and biodiversity-based/benign processes, delivering material and immaterial benefits that fulfil the economic and social requirements of all people now and in the future. While the complementary understanding of the circular economy, bioeconomy and green economy provides important guidelines for sustainability transformations post-Covid-19, there is a need for more holistic, systems-wide and integrative research work on potentially competing or supplementary sustainability narratives. This type of work of clarification and synthesis is relevant to a wide range of scholars and professionals, since the conceptual understanding of sustainability narratives informs practical implementation through strategies, actions and monitoring tools, in public and private decision-making.

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