4.6 Article

A terminology for downcycling

Journal

JOURNAL OF INDUSTRIAL ECOLOGY
Volume 26, Issue 4, Pages 1164-1174

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jiec.13289

Keywords

circular economy; downcycling; downgrading; industrial ecology; recycling; waste

Funding

  1. German Environment Agency (UBA) [FKZ 3717313490]

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The term "downcycling" is defined in this article as the phenomenon of quality reduction of materials reprocessed from waste relative to their original quality. The authors propose a more precise terminology that can help quantify downcycling and reduce material-related environmental impacts.
The term downcycling is often used anecdotally to describe imperfections in recycling. However, it is rarely defined. Here, we identify six meanings of the term downcycling as used in scientific articles and reports. These encompass the material quality of reprocessed materials, target applications, product value, alloying element losses, material systems, and additional primary production. In a proposal for harmonized and more specific terminology, we define downcycling as the phenomenon of quality reduction of materials reprocessed from waste relative to their original quality. We further identify that the reduced quality can express itself thermodynamically, functionally, and economically, covering all perspectives on downcycling. Dilution, contamination, reduced demand for recycled materials, and design-related issues can cause those downcycling effects. We anticipate that this more precise terminology can help quantify downcycling, keep materials in the loop longer, use materials more often and at higher quality, and therefore assist in reducing material-related environmental impacts.

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