How decarbonization and the circular economy interact: Benefits and trade-offs in the case of the buildings, transport and electricity sectors in Austria
Paper under review in the Journal of Industrial Ecology
23 Pages Posted: 12 Dec 2024
Date Written: November 22, 2024
Abstract
The widely heralded decarbonization of economies is a significant intervention in countries' societal metabolism, which eliminates the use of fossil fuels but also requires renewing societal stocks such as buildings, vehicles and power plants, which in turn requires materials and energy. The circular economy (CE) shifts a country's metabolism towards less material demand, waste and emissions, moving away from a linear resource flow pattern to one that narrows and slows flows and closes loops, in order to support climate protection. This article uses the example of Austria to examine how decarbonization and CE interact in the buildings, transport and electricity sectors. We use scenarios to analyze the contribution of decarbonization and CE strategies to achieving targets set by Austrian policy: (1) carbon neutrality by 2040, (2) ambitious reductions in material consumption, and (3) limiting annual land take.
A scenario focusing on ‘decarbonization’ alone reduces processed materials by 7% compared to the reference scenario, but is associated with high risks: it requires large supplies of green electricity, technology-critical elements and smooth permitting procedures. A ‘weak CE’ scenario shows little mitigating effects on these risks. CE and land take targets are missed in the two scenarios. Avoiding further expansion of buildings and roads on unbuilt land as part of a ‘strong CE’ scenario is identified as key to narrow the processed materials of respective sectors from 102 to 26 Mt/a consistent with all three policy targets. It reduces inter alia demand for green electricity facilitating decarbonization and additionally generating co-benefits for health.
Keywords: [Insert Institutional Affiliation information for each author here: Name of department, institution, city, and country. See example.] socio-ecological transformation, decarbonization, circular economy, narrowing loops, land take, policy targets, socio-ecological transformation, decarbonization
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation