ABSTRACT

Our planet is a closed system with limited material resources, yet our current economic model is designed in a one-way direction from resource extraction to disposal, leading to resource depletion. This book proposes a new economic model, offering an alternative to this linear ‘take-make-waste’ economy.

Material Matters shows a way of creating a circular economy by using the unlimited resources we have: renewable energy, data and intelligence. It describes a system based on circular business models centred on selling performance rather than ownership, designing products and buildings as resource banks and equipping products with a ‘material passport’ to ensure their usability for future generations. Businesses thereby become custodians of materials, rather than consumers of materials and sellers of products. The book evokes the vision of a radically new economic model based on a compelling narrative, supported with cases that have been developed in conjunction with major companies, for example, convincing Philips to sell light instead of lamps, saving energy and materials by creating a whole new business model, a case which has become iconic for the circular economy.

Material Matters is not a somber analysis of the state of the planet but a concrete and comprehensive agenda for change, offering perspectives for taking action for business and individual consumers alike.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter One|24 pages

The product-as-problem

chapter Chapter Two|17 pages

The linear economy or the end of the line

chapter Chapter Three|14 pages

Spaceship Earth – a closed system

chapter Chapter Four|22 pages

Permanent temporality

chapter Chapter Five|22 pages

Changing the rules of the game

chapter Chapter Six|26 pages

The material passport

chapter Chapter Seven|13 pages

Madaster – a registry for materials

chapter Chapter Eight|11 pages

UDMR – the Universal Declaration of Material Rights

chapter Chapter Nine|22 pages

Material-as-a-Service – rethinking material ownership

chapter Chapter Ten|18 pages

Completing the Copernican revolution