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SUSTAINABLE INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT: THEORY AND PRACTICE Jurgis. K. STANIŠKIS “Knowledge-Based Technologies and OT Methodologies for Strategic Decisions of Sustainable Development” (KORSD-2009), September 30 – October 3, 2009, Vilnius The Institute of Environmental Engineering Kaunas University of Technology The Institute of Environmental Engineering (APINI) was established in 1991 as an independent interdisciplinary research institute affiliated with Kaunas University of Technology, the largest school of higher education in engineering in Lithuania. The APINI has 15 employees and its activities fall into the following main research and service areas: •Environmental and quality management systems •Cleaner production, Cleaner production financing and EMA •Integrated waste management •Eco-design. Life-cycle assessment •Environmental impact assessment •Chemical risk assessment and management •Water resource management KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 2 The Institute of Environmental Engineering Kaunas University of Technology In 1995, APINI together with other Lithuanian universities initiated scientific quarterly journal “Environmental Research, Engineering and Management” in English. APINI staff : - takes part in international and national conferences; - published more than 140 publications, including 5 monographs and scientific reports and 9 Ph.D. theses - takes part in educational program at MSc and PhD level; APINI is coordinator of MSc programme “Environmental Management and Cleaner Production” for Baltic Countries. KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 3 THEORY KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 4 Sustainable industrial development – strategy to meet the present needs of industry and other stakeholders without comprising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs Sustainable industrial development should be considered as a process of continuous improvement of environmental, economic and social performance in industry. Such process approach enables the identification of particular performance parameters that could be managed. KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 5 The key sustainable industrial development measures Cleaner production Environmental and integrated management systems Product oriented measures based on life cycle approach Sustainability reporting based on performance evaluation KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 6 Friedrich Bio Schmidt-Bleek Factor 10 Institute, France (1) First, we must create our wealth and wellbeing with far less natural resources than hitherto the case, on the average we must dematerialize our western economy by at least a factor 10. Second, technically this is achievable through systems innovation without losing end use satisfaction. Third, we must organize a cost-neutral shift of overheads, charges and taxes from income to natural resources. KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 7 Friedrich Bio Schmidt-Bleek Factor 10 Institute, France (2) In order to: 1. Internalize the costs of using nature; 2. Stimulate eco-innovation; 3. Give incentives to producers for dematerializing goods and services; 4. Create a price structure on the market that rewards purchasing and using eco-efficient goods and services; 5. Make labor less costly and thus create new jobs. Fourth, we must use any other reasonable and cost-effective option available in order to lessen the use of natural resources, including thorough education, elimination of perverse subsidies, review of norms and standards, and on occasion new control legislation. KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 8 The Services of Nature Humans would not have appeared and survived on planet earth without the services of nature. These services are the essential support for all life on earth. They include, for instance, the availability of liquid water and clean air, edible plants and animals, the propagative power of seeds and sperms, and a multitude of different elements and materials. KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 9 Indicators – making progress toward transparent goals, Ecological Rucksack The „ecological rucksack“ of a product is the total amount of natural material input from cradle to the point of sale – for manufacturing a product or making it otherwise available, minus the weight of the product itself. KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 10 Mirjas Heavy Morning Mirja wakes up and puts on her 12.5 kg heavy wristwatch. She slips into her 30 kg heavy jeans, brews her coffee with the 52 kg weighing coffee machine and enjoys the refreshing drink from her 1.5 kg heavy mug. After putting on her 3.5 kg weighing jogging shoes she gets on the way to the office on her 400 kg heavy bicycle. Once there, she turns on her computer that weighs several tons and puts in her first call with the help of her telephone weighing 25 kg. Mirja's day has begun as usual. Except this time it started with ecological rucksacks. KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 11 GDP GDP is not meant for comparing the real wealth of nations. GDP does not take into consideration the damages imposed upon the environment by economic activities. “The welfare of a nation can scarcely be inferred from a measure of national income….Distinction must be kept in mind between quantity and quality of growth, between costs and returns, between the short and the long run. Goals for more growth should specify more growth of what and for what” The Nobel Prize winner Simon Kuznets KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 12 Ecological Footprint Mathis Wackernagel has developed the “Ecological Footprint” concept. The Footprint “measures humanity’s demand on the biosphere in terms of the area of biologically productive land and sea required to provide the resources we use and to absorb our waste. The footprint of a country or region includes all the cropland, grazing land, forest, and fishing grounds required to produce the food, fibre and timber it consumes and to absorb the wastes it emits.” KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 13 The Total Mass Requirement The total mass requirement, TMR, is the sum total of the life-cycle-wide material input into the industrial metabolisms of a country (or of any other defined economic entity). On the macro-level, GDP divided by TMR, could be considered as a decoupling indicator for the environmental impact potential of an economic entity. KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 14 Material Input Pro unit Service (MIPS) To indicate full costs on the micro-level, MIPS, the life-cycle-wide Material Input Pro unit deliverable Service (extractable value) from a product was developed. When achieving a decrease in MIPS for a technology-derived service (e.g. transporting a person one km by car), one has a direct measure for the potential to decouple this service from the consumption of nature. KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 15 Get the prices right! As long as eco-conscious production and consumption is not profitable – sustainability will not be reached! KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 16 SCP system Regulations Input Market Non-product output PRODUCTION Product CONSUMPTION KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 17 EU Action Plan SCP Key Challenges: 1. Leveraging Innovation 2. Better Products 3. Leaner and Cleaner Production 4. Smarter Consumption 5. Global Markets KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 18 Leveraging Innovation European Institute of Technology Framework Programme for Research Environmental Technologies Action Plan Cooperation Among Clusters Cooperation between Research and Industry KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 19 Better Products Dynamic Performance Requirements for example EuP EPD, Sustainability Labels, etc. Eco-design New Standards on Resource Efficiency KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 20 Leaner and Cleaner Production Resource and Material Efficiency Targets Reinforcement of Eco-innovation and Environmental Technologies Review of EMAS Incentives for SMEs KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 21 Smarter Consumption: Changing Behavior Environmental Performance Agreements with Retailers Enhanced Use of Market-based Instruments Differentiation of VAT Revision of EU Eco-label Regulation To protect Consumers against Misleading Information Green Procurement On-line Consumer education Tools KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 22 How to Fix Capitalism In these tough times, it’s easy to forget that during the past century, the world has gotten better. But billions have not been able to benefit from capitalism’s miracle. Bill Gates, TIME , 08 11 2008 KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 23 Creative capitalism isn’t some big new economic theory. And it isn’t a knock on capitalism itself. It is a way to answer a vital question: How can we most effectively spread the benefits of capitalism and the huge improvements in quality of life it can provide to people who have been left out? KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 24 1960 “Many people assume, wrongly, that a company exists simply to make money. While this is an important result of a company’s existence, we have to go deeper and find the real reasons for our being... People get together and exist as... a company so that they are able to accomplish something collectively that they could not accomplish separately – they make a contribution to society.” Dave Packard KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 25 1970 Three thousand people show up to GM’S annual meeting as stockholders endorsed resolutions to establish a committee on corporate responsibility. Milton Friedman wrote “The Social Responsibility of Business Is to Increase Its Profits.” KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 26 PRACTICE KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 27 GDP per capita in purchasing power standards SEE – Albania, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, FYR of Macedonia, Serbia and Montenegro Caucasus – Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia Eastern Europe – Belarus, Moldova, Russian Federation, Ukraine Central Asia – Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan Source: European Environment Agency Report No. 3/2007 KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 28 GDP per capita in Purchasing Power Standards (PPS) European Union (EU-27 = 100) 140 120 EU-27=100 100 80 60 40 20 0 1997 1998 1999 European Union (27 countries) 2000 2001 2002 2003 European Union (15 countries) 2004 Lithuania 2005 Bulgaria Source: Eurostat KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 29 Relative decoupling of resource use and environmental pressures from economic growth Eastern Europe, Caucasus and Central Asia (EECCA), Index (1992=100) 120 Index (1992=100) 100 80 60 40 20 0 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 GDP 1997 1998 Energy use 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 CO2 emisions Source: EEA Report No. 3/2007 KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 30 Relative decoupling of resource use and environmental pressures from economic growth EU-15, Index (1990 = 100) 140 Index (1990=100) 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 GDP at market prices (Millions of euro (at 1995 prices and exchange rates)) Gross energy consumption (kt of oil equivalent (TOE)) Emission of greenhouse gases (CO2 equivalent, kt) Source: Eurostat KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 31 Relative decoupling of resource use and environmental pressures from economic growth Lithuania, Index (2002=100) 180 160 Index (2002=100) 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Gross Value Added (constant prices), industry (Millios of LTL) Gross energy consumption (kt of oil equivalent (TOE)) Water consumption for production (millions m3) Emission of greenhouse gases (CO2 equivalent, kt) Source: Lithuanian Statistics Department KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 32 Energy Intensitiy Eastern Europe, Caucasus and South East Europe, measured in tonnes of oil equivalent per unit GDP in purchasing power parity 0,6 0,5 0,4 0,3 0,2 0,1 (A ve ra ge ) EU -2 5 Cr oa tia st an Ka za kh ja n Az er ba i en ia Ar m e Uk ra in n ra tio Fe de Ru ss ia n M ol do va 0 Source: EEA Report No. 3/2007 KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 33 Energy intensity Gross inland consumption of energy divided by GDP (index, 1995=100) 2000 1800 1600 1400 1200 1000 800 600 400 200 1999 Ja pa n US A EU De 1 5 nm ar k G er m an y G re ec e Cz S ec pa h in Re pu bl ic Es to ni a Hu ng ar y La tv ia Li th ua ni a Po la n Bu d lg ar ia EU -2 5 0 2002 Source: EEA Report No. 9/2005 KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 34 Material Intensity Material domestic consumption divided by GDP (index, 1995=100) 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 1992 Ja pa n Br az il US A EU -2 5 EU De -1 5 nm ar G er k m an G y re ec e Cz Sp ec h ai Re n pu bl i Es c to n Hu ia ng ar y La tv Li i th a ua ni a Po la n Bu d lg ar i No a rw ay 0 2000 Source: EEA Report No. 9/2005 KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 35 Non-fossil fuel contribution to total electricity generation % of total energy production 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 ld W or EU -2 7 Cr oa tia Az er ba ija n Ka za kh st an en ia Ar m e Uk ra in n ra tio Fe de ol do Ru s si an M Li th ua ni a va 0 Nuclear Renewable Sources: EEA Report No. 3/2007, International Energy Agency KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 36 Implementation Of Quality And Environmental Management Systems Top 10 countries and Lithuania ISO 9001 China Italy Japan Spain India Germany USA UK France Netherlands Lithuania ISO 14001 12/2007 210773 115359 73176 65112 46091 45195 36192 35517 22981 18922 809 09/2009 924 12/2007 09/2009 China 30489 Japan 27955 Spain 13852 Italy 12057 UK 7323 Republic of Korea 6392 USA 5462 Germany 4877 Sweden 3800 France 3476 Lithuania 312 451 EMAS Germany Spain Italy Austria Denmark Portugal Sweden UK Greece Belgium Lithuania 03/2009 1417 1063 978 257 94 79 75 69 62 49 0 Sources: ISO Central Secretariat, Lithuanian Standards Board, EMAS Helpdesk KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 37 Ecological Footprint of Nations US A Au st ra lia Sp ai n Ja pa G n er m an Si y ng ap or Li e th ua ni a Tu rk ey Br az il Ch in a Ar m en ia M or oc co In di a 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 W or ld Global hectares per person Ecological footprint per person, by country, 2005 In 2005, the globally available biocapacity was 2,1 global hectares per person Source: WWF, Living Planet Report, 2008 KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 38 APINI – NEFCO “soft” credit line for CP innovations financing C O M P A N Y COMPAN Y KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 39 Implementation of WM innovations in Lithuanian industry Number of enterprises Number of WM options analysed Number of implemented WM measures WM investments, EUR Savings from implemented WM measures, EUR/year Textile industry 14 42 39 2 734 000 2 474 000 Food industry 13 27 25 2 027 000 1 365 000 Chemical industry 6 15 14 435 000 493 000 Machinery production 5 5 5 1 033 000 389 000 Production of radio, TV and telecommunica tion equipment 2 6 6 1 478 000 613 000 Furniture production 6 10 10 1 030 000 421 000 Wood industry 3 6 6 1 431 000 1 067 000 Industry sector KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 40 CONCLUSIONS KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 41 Sustainable Consumption & Production. How to make it possible? 1. 2. 3. to create our wealth and well being with far less natural resources than hitherto the case, on the average to dematerialize Western economy by at least a factor 10. Technically this is achievable through systems innovation without losing end use satisfaction. to organize a cost-neutral shift of overheads, charges and taxes from income to natural resources, in order to internalize the costs of using nature, stimulate eco-innovation, give incentives to producers for dematerializing goods and services, create a price structure on the market that rewards purchasing and using eco-efficient goods and services, and make labor less costly and thus create new jobs. to use any other reasonable and cost-effective option available in order to lessen the use of natural resources, including through education, elimination of perverse subsidies, review of norms and standards, and on occasion new control legislation. KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 42 Sustainable Consumption & Production. How to make it possible? In brief, we need to add a new dimension to the traditional environmental protection: Rather than just fighting one symptom of our impact on the ecosphere after another, we must get to the root cause of our problems. We must understand the currently fundamental mismatch between generating welfare for people and the stability of the carrier system earth. KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 43 Sustainable Consumption & Production. How to make it possible? Whereas the focus of the 1st phase (clean-up environmental technologies) was dealing with selected symptoms, the 2nd phase (preventive actions) will be governed by a systems approach, aiming at eradicating the root cause for the current incompatibility of the human economy with the laws of nature. Without taking this task very seriously, the chances that the children of our children and theirs can continue to enjoy a worthwhile life may be in question. KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 44 Prosperity without growth Business cannot continue as usual and although the current crisis is uncomfortable, it could provide a unique opportunity to jointly address financial and ecological sustainability. KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 45 Prof. Habil. Dr. Jurgis Staniškis Institute of Environmental Engineering, Kaunas University of Technology, K. Donelaičio str. 20, LT-44239 Kaunas, Lithuania Web page: www.apini.lt E-mail: [email protected] KORSD-2009, 30/09/2009 - 03/10/2009, Vilnius 46