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INDUSTRIAL ECOLOGY AND ECO INDUSTRIAL PARKS. AN INTRODUCTION

INDUSTRIAL ECOLOGY AND ECO INDUSTRIAL PARKS. AN INTRODUCTION . Maria Litido , ENEA. THE DOMAIN.

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INDUSTRIAL ECOLOGY AND ECO INDUSTRIAL PARKS. AN INTRODUCTION

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  1. INDUSTRIAL ECOLOGY AND ECO INDUSTRIAL PARKS.AN INTRODUCTION Maria Litido, ENEA Faro, 1 April 2014

  2. THE DOMAIN In nature there is little or no waste. In natural systems, organisms produce waste which becomes the residual products used in a continuous production and consumption system as it passes along the biological food and reproduction chain. Industrial Ecology (IE): The namecomes from the idea that the analogy of naturalsystemsshould be usedas an aid in understandinghow to design sustainable industrial systems (Robert Frosh and Nicholas E. Gallopoulos, 1989) Industrial ecology and eco industrial parks. An introduction

  3. Shiftof industrial process • from linear (open loop) systems, in whichresource and capital investmentsmovethrough the system to becomewaste • to a closedloopsystem,wherewastes can becomeinputs for new processes. http://www.lhwmp.org/home/BHW/industrial-ecology.aspx Industrial ecology and eco industrial parks. An introduction

  4. PRINCIPLES OF IE • Opportunities to establish partnerships and engagement with communities and government in developing a more responsive attitude to sustainable industry practices; • Locate industries strategically to optimise the capture and concentration of by-products, waste material flows and energy surplus for use by other industries; • Co-locate industries that will benefit economically from the trade or exchange of waste and by-products; • Opportunities to add value by applying waste and energy recovery practices in industrial systems; • Acatalyst to create synergies and an environment for fostering technological advancement in cleaner production, waste management and sustainable industry development; • Provide appropriate ‘smart infrastructure’, to ensure the growth of eco-industries that support sustainable industry practices to maintain high levels of innovation; • Support industry policies and incentives to encourage innovation, collaboration and commercialisation of new and improved product developments using materials, water and energy surplus to production; and • Commitment to the benefit of industries that have sustainable development. Industrial ecology and eco industrial parks. An introduction

  5. ADVANTAGES OF IE • micro-level (firms) • meso level (Eco Industrial Parks, EIP) • macro-level (regional and wider global networks of manufacturing activity centres) Industrial Ecology works best where there is a strong agglomeration of firms that have the capacity to utilise waste as a resource in production. Proximity generates externality savings and economies of scale, which reduce operational costs for companies sharing common suppliers or services. Industrial ecology and eco industrial parks. An introduction

  6. ADVANTAGES OF IE • Firms and organisations involved in area/district/cluster are able to achieve synergies and leverage economic advantage from shared access to information and knowledge networks, supplier and distribution chains, markets and marketing intelligence, special competencies, resources and support institutions available in a specific locality. • A critical mass of waste through geographic concentration offers opportunities to encourage the co-location of firms: Industrial Ecology provides a vision and basis for understanding how improvements can be made to current production processes. Industrial ecology and eco industrial parks. An introduction

  7. ECO INDUSTRIAL PARKS “The goal of an EIP is to improve the economic performance of the participating companies while minimizing their environmental impacts. Components of this approach include: green design of park infrastructure and plants (new or retrofitted); cleaner production, pollution prevention; energy efficiency; and intercompany partnering. An EIP also seeks benefits for neighboring communities to assure that their net impact of its development is positive”. Source: [1] in References Industrial ecology and eco industrial parks. An introduction

  8. Source: http://www.engineering.dartmouth.edu/~d30345d/courses/engs37/EIPs.pdf Industrial ecology and eco industrial parks. An introduction

  9. Source: Industrial ecology and eco industrial parks. An introduction

  10. INTEGRATED EIP Integrated Eco-Industry Parks (IEIPs) are specifically designed to encourage the development of industrial ecologies centred on industry clusters. They can range from a complex containing several core facilities comprising a power station and major chemical plant facility, as for example at Kalundborg EIP, to a simple cluster of industries, some of which make use of common user services such as steam or electricity from a co-generation facility. • View of the Kalundborg Eco-Industrial Park, Denmark. For more details: seeslides #17,18. Industrial ecology and eco industrial parks. An introduction

  11. An integrated Eco-Industrial Park. Source: Roberts and Greenhalgh. Networked eco-industrial park system (NEIPS). They represent EIPs macro-level developments that have strategic links or alliances with other EIPs across metropolitan regions or even global network structures. Industrial ecology and eco industrial parks. An introduction

  12. PLANNING OF EIP Planning plays a key role in encouraging new synergies and networks by locating activities in eco- and traditional industrial parks. Its function will be to define a kind of strategic architecture or blueprint, which creates the right combinations of industries, infrastructure, technologies, skills, resources and legal frameworks to encourage industrial ecology to develop. Planning systems need to be flexible, responsive to changes in industry and materials technology and need to provide incentives to encourage greater integration of development processes. Industrial ecology and eco industrial parks. An introduction

  13. PLANNING OF EIP Usefultools of IE in planning EIP: • material and energy flow studies ("industrial metabolism"); • life-cycle planning, design and assessment; • design for the environment ("eco-design"); • dematerialization and de-carbonization; • “Industrial symbiosis”; • product-oriented environmental policy; • eco-efficiency. Industrial ecology and eco industrial parks. An introduction

  14. Source: http://www.engineering.dartmouth.edu/~d30345d/courses/engs37/EIPs.pdf Industrial ecology and eco industrial parks. An introduction

  15. Source: http://www.engineering.dartmouth.edu/~d30345d/courses/engs37/EIPs.pdf Industrial ecology and eco industrial parks. An introduction

  16. WHAT IS INDUSTRIAL SYMBIOSIS? It is a process whereby a waste product in one industry is turned into a resource for use in one or more other industries. Typical characteristics of an effective symbiosis: • The participating industries must fit together, but be different. • The individual industry agreements are based on commercially sound principles. • Environmental improvements, resource conservation, and economic incentives go hand in hand. • The development of the symbiosis has been on a voluntary basis, but in close co-operation with the authorities. • Short physical distances between participating plants are a definite advantage. • Short “mental” distances are equally important. • Mutual management understanding and co-operative commitment is essential. • Effective operative communication between participants is required. • Significant side benefits are achieved in other areas such as safety and training. Industrial ecology and eco industrial parks. An introduction

  17. KALUNDBORG EIP Kalundborg Eco-Industrial Park is an industrial symbiosis network located in Kalundborg,Denmark, in which companies in the region collaborate to use each other's by-products and otherwise share resources. The park at Kalundborg is the first full realization of industrial symbiosis. Example of Industrial Symbiosis: waste steam from a waste incinerator(right) ispiped to an ethanol plant(left) whereitisusedas in input to their production process. Industrial ecology and eco industrial parks. An introduction

  18. KALUNDBORG EIP Not originally planned for industrial symbiosis, its current state of waste heat and materials sharing developed over a period of 20 years. Since 1972, the facilities in Kalundborg have been expanding and have been sharing a variety of materials and waste products, some for the purpose of industrial symbiosis and some out of necessity, for example, freshwater scarcity in the area has led to water reuse schemes. Source: http://www.pollutionissues.com/Ho-Li/Industrial-Ecology.html Industrial ecology and eco industrial parks. An introduction

  19. OPEN CHALLENGES • Industrial Ecology is a concept often totally misunderstood: • Eco-industrial development projects are often wrongly perceived as adding to industry costs and/or they cut across the conventional wisdom of the planning profession and community attitudes towards the management of waste. • Adjacent residential communities raise concerns about the safety issues affecting the handling, storage and reprocessing of waste. • Manufacturers have concerns about the dependence they may have on common user facilities and what happens if these fail or the prices for services provided become uncompetitive. 19 Industrial ecology and eco industrial parks. An introduction

  20. LESSONS LEARNED Industrial Ecology offers a way forward. It depends upon synergies and co-location of a wide range of secondary and tertiary economic activities. It is inherently concerned with facilitating and creating industry clusters. It also involves identifying and developing new systems, uses and technologies to encourage plants to use waste materials rather than discard them in landfills or other treatment facilities. Industrial ecology and eco industrial parks. An introduction

  21. CONCLUSION Industrial ecology will only succeed when mind sets are changed, and that means developing strategies to gain community and business acceptance for new approaches to the development of manufacturing areas. This is certainly the lesson learned. Industrial ecology and eco industrial parks. An introduction

  22. REFERENCES • Roberts, Brian (2004). "The application of industrial ecology principles and planning guidelines for the development of eco-industrial parks: an Australian case study", Journal of Cleaner Production 12 (2004). • Gibbs, David; Deutz, Pauline (2005). "Implementing industrial ecology? Planning for Eco-industrial Parks in the USA". Geoforum 36, 452–464. • Gibbs, David; Deutz, Pauline; Proctor, Amy (2005). "Industrial Ecology and Eco-industrial Development: A Potential Paradigm for Local and Regional Development?". Regional Studies, Vol. 39.2, pp. 171–183. • Frosch, R.A.; Gallopoulos, N.E. (1989). "Strategies for Manufacturing". Scientific American 261 (3): 144–152. • Allenby, Brad (2006). "The ontologies of industrial ecology". Progress in Industrial Ecology (Inderscience Enterprises Ltd.) • J. Ehrenfeld and N. Gertler (1997), "Industrial Ecology in Practice. The Evolution of Interdependence at Kalundborg." Journal of Industrial Ecology 1.1: 67-79. • Lowitt, Peter C (2008). "Devens Redevelopment: Emergence of a Successful Eco-Industrial Park in the United States“, Journal of Industrial Ecology . Industrial ecology and eco industrial parks. An introduction

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