ABSTRACT

Business-as-usual in terms of industrial and technological development – even if based on a growing fear of pollution and shortages of natural resources – will never deliver sustainable development. However, the growing interest in recent years in the new science of industrial ecology (IE), and the idea that industrial systems should mimic the quasi-cyclical functions of natural ecosystems in an 'industrial food chain', holds promise in addressing not only short-term environmental problems but also the long-term holistic evolution of industrial systems.

This possibility requires a number of key conditions to be met, not least the restructuring of our manufacturing and consumer society to reduce the effects of material and energy flows at the very point in history when globalisation is rapidly increasing them. This book sets out to address the theoretical considerations that should be made implicit in future research as well as practical implementation options for industry. The systematic recovery of industrial wastes, the minimisation of losses caused by dispersion, the dematerialisation of the economy, the requirement to decrease our reliance on fuels derived from hydrocarbons and the need for management systems that help foster inter-industry collaboration and networks are among the topics covered.

The book is split into four sections. First, the various definitions of IE are outlined. Here, important distinctions are made between industrial metabolism and IE. Second, a number of different industrial sectors, including glass, petroleum and electric power, are assessed with regard to the operationalisation of industrial ecology. Eco-industrial Parks and Networks are also analysed. Third, the options for overcoming obstacles that stand in the way of the closing of cycles such as the separation and screening of materials are considered and, finally, a number of implications for the future are assessed. The contributions to Perspectives on Industrial Ecology come from the leading thinkers working in this field at the crossroads between a number of different disciplines: engineering, ecology, bio-economics, geography, the social sciences and law.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

part 1|43 pages

Concepts and Ideas

chapter 1|15 pages

Industrial Ecology and Material Flow Analysis

Basic concepts, policy relevance and some case studies*

chapter 4|4 pages

Industrial Ecology

Philosophical and political meanings

part 2|130 pages

Ideas in Action

chapter 5|3 pages

Industrial Ecology and Services to Enterprises

Cell metabolism versus industrial metabolism

chapter 7|9 pages

The Ecodesign Process

chapter 11|8 pages

Recycling of Zinc-Containing Secondary Products from the Galvanising and Steel Industries

A new case of applied industrial ecology

chapter 13|8 pages

Industrial Ecology in Motion

Enterprise integration

chapter 18|12 pages

Applied Industrial Ecology and Technology Transposition

Steelmaking slag and dust co-products, and secondary slag metallurgy

part 3|150 pages

Future Challenges

chapter 21|31 pages

A Systems Option for Sustainable Techno-Metabolism

An ecological assessment of Japan’s industrial technology system

chapter 22|19 pages

The Functional Society

The service economy

chapter 27|14 pages

From Ecology of Natural Systems to Industrial Ecology

The need for an extension of the scope of ecology

chapter 28|5 pages

Perspectives on Industrial Ecology