Circular procurement
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Circular procurement is a form of government procurement that supports the transition to a circular economy. This approach builds on the principles of sustainable procurement by integrating elements such as the closed-loop use of materials.[1] It is achieved by purchasing goods and services that minimize waste and use of virgin resources through models such as shared ownership, refurbishment of existing assets, and the acquisition of products containing recycled materials. Additionally, circular procurement considers the end of a product's lifecycle, ensuring materials can be reused beyond their initial application.[2]
Policy
[edit]The European Union (EU) Circular Economy Action Plan is a program aimed at enhancing the sustainability of product life cycles.[3] The plan identifies public procurement as a factor in the transition towards a circular economy and outlines measures for the European Commission to promote circular economy principles in Green Public Procurement (GPP). These measures emphasize circular attributes in revised or newly established EU GPP criteria.
Circular public procurement also contributes to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), as outlined by the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.[4] Specifically, SDG 12 – Responsible Consumption and Production – includes a target to promote sustainable public procurement practices in line with national policies and priorities.[1] Various countries, regions, and cities are also developing circular strategies, highlighting public procurement as a mechanism to scale up the transition to a circular economy.[1]
The following levels can be applied to implement circular procurement:[5]
- System Level: Focuses on contractual methods that enable circularity, such as supplier take-back agreements or product-as-a-service models.
- Supplier Level: Pertains to how suppliers incorporate circularity into their systems and processes to align their products and services with circular procurement criteria.
- Product Level: Concentrates on the products that public authorities procure, which suppliers might source further down the supply chain.
Benefits
[edit]In addition to supporting sustainable procurement, circular procurement considers the entire product life cycle – from initial procurement to end of life – and can generate financial benefits. Further advantages include reduced environmental impact and a closed-loop system with the potential for a full recovery and minimal landfill waste.[6] In 2014, it was estimated that by 2025, circular procurement could add $1 trillion to the global economy and create 100,000 jobs worldwide.[7]
Criticism
[edit]While circular procurement is often promoted as a key strategy in the transition to a circular economy, critics argue that many initiatives risk falling into greenwashing, with superficial or symbolic efforts that fail to address deeper issues of overproduction and unsustainable consumption.
The commodification of sustainability through circular procurement may reinforce market-based logic, encouraging the purchase of “green” products without challenging underlying patterns of consumerism. Rebound effects, such as increased consumption due to perceived sustainability, can undermine environmental goals. Additionally, circular supply chains can still rely on opaque, exploitative labor practices, particularly in the Global South.
The transition also faces practical barriers, including high infrastructure costs, lack of standardized definitions or enforcement mechanisms, and limited scalability beyond pilot projects. Some scholars argue that circular procurement depoliticizes environmental justice by focusing on technical fixes rather than addressing structural inequalities rooted in capitalism, colonialism, and systemic extraction.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Public procurement for a circular economy: Good practice and guidance. EU Commission. 2017. Content is copied from this source, which is © European Union, 1995-2018. Reuse is authorised, provided the source is acknowledged.
- ^ "Circular procurement knowledge hub". www.greenindustries.sa.gov.au. Retrieved 2025-03-16.
- ^ "Circular economy action plan - European Commission". environment.ec.europa.eu. Retrieved 2025-05-29.
- ^ "Transforming our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development | Department of Economic and Social Affairs". sdgs.un.org. Retrieved 2025-05-29.
- ^ Mervyn Jones, Iben Kinch Sohn, Anne-Mette Lysemose Bendsen (2017). Circular Procurement Best Practice Report (PDF). ICLEI Europe. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 19, 2022.
- ^ Qazi, Asad Ali; Appolloni, Andrea (2022-09-01). "A systematic review on barriers and enablers toward circular procurement management". Sustainable Production and Consumption. 33: 343–359. Bibcode:2022SusPC..33..343Q. doi:10.1016/j.spc.2022.07.013. ISSN 2352-5509.
- ^ Ellen Mac Arthur Foundation, McKinsey. "Towards the Circular Economy: Accelerating the scale-up across global supply chains" (PDF). World Economic Forum.
Further reading
[edit]- Alhola, Katriina; Ryding, Sven- Olof; Salmenperä, Hanna; Busch, Niels Juul (February 2019). "Exploiting the Potential of Public Procurement: Opportunities for Circular Economy". Journal of Industrial Ecology. 23 (1): 96–109. Bibcode:2019JInEc..23...96A. doi:10.1111/jiec.12770.
- (PDF) Circular procurement management in the circular economy system