Geographies in Depth

Why China is embracing the circular economy

Johnson Yeh
Associate Director for Environmental Initiatives, World Economic Forum
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Competitiveness Framework

The Chinese economy has grown rapidly and created tremendous wealth. Nominal GDP has grown 7.5 times between 2000 and 2013. Total household income has about doubled between 2005 and 2012 alone and stands to more than triple between 2012 and 2030. By 2030, the upper middle class will make up more than half of urban households. However, this rapid growth puts a tremendous strain on resources. China’s growth demands a strong supply of raw materials, water, energy, and food, among others. One potential remedy to resource supply constraints and consequently high resource prices and volatility could be for China to further engage with the concepts and approaches of the circular economy.

Engaging in circular economy practices helps decouple growth and resource needs.  For example, refurbishing products, feeding functional components and recycled materials back into the appropriate value chains, and efficiently utilizing bio cycles, could significantly dampen not just China, but also the world’s hunger for untapped resources, while sustaining economic growth.

The Chinese government has already begun to embrace the ideas of the circular economy, first formalized in the country’s 2009 circular economy Promotion Law. As one of the first nations worldwide, China embraced the language of the circular economy and has seen a great deal of success on many fronts. Some examples are its eco-city and eco-parks, as well as, factories clusters with advanced industrial symbiosis practices. But circular economy requires a global level collaboration along different parts of the supply chain, and China needs to think about its role in the global supply chain and how it can make these changes of design to circularity with the international players together.

The new circular growth model will be a great way for China to transition from a manufacturing dominated economy to a more service-driven economy. While the Chinese economy is much more known for manufacturing-intensive growth, rather than a strong service economy engine, circular economy service and capability needs play to some of China’s core strengths. One possibility is for Chinese companies to leverage their wide variety of manufacturing capabilities and strong local supply chain ecosystem to take a leadership position in remanufacturing and refurbishing space. This in turn could inform asset maintenance schedules and draw demand for effective reverse logistics services. Circular goods that are designed for circularity also means more frequent customer interaction, more possibility of upselling, and more opportunity to use maintenance as the main income stream for products.

Furthermore, with China’s worldwide predominant manufacturing position and natural resource wealth, Chinese companies could set recycling standards and define future global supply chains with recycled materials and remanufactured parts. As the Chinese economy matures further, it will eventually make a shift away from a predominantly manufacturing-centric economy and more strongly develop the service economy one of its growth drivers. The circular economy can act as a beach head into the world of services. Since many of these services require only marginally more skills than original manufacturing, China could make the move without the need for massive re-education efforts, effectively just adjusting existing infrastructure and workforce capabilities to new targets.

Moreover, the shift to the circular economy in China does not only apply to China the factory of the world, but also to China as the largest market in the world in the future.  For example, growing consumption (private consumption share of GDP expected to rise from less than a third in 2012 to over half in 2030) could be met with asset-sharing, or performance over ownership business models. Successful examples of this globally include Zipcar, which allowed owners to lease out their car during idle times, and allowed customers with short term demand to pay a small amount for the short term need instead of having the need to own the asset in the long run. As consumer demands grow and develop, their preferences can still largely be shaped and adoption rates of new business models could actually be higher than in other economies. In addition, the sheer size and variation in income levels across China could allow for the sale of tiered products across various sub-markets. That means refurbished products could be sold in parallel to new products without noticeable cannibalization, and could even potentially dampen the extent of the counterfeit market in China.

China’s rapid build-out of cities across the country due to urbanization trends can be a perfect spawning bed for this transition to a circular economy. If properly designed, these new-built cities can showcase as a proof of concept for circular economy ideas as having strong economic and social benefits. China’s government has a strong track record of drafting and executing policy and infrastructure decisions. Therefore, China can be a great place for the resource revolution, starting with circular economy, to start.

Author: Johnson Yeh is an Associate Director for Environmental Initiatives at the World Economic Forum

Image: Pedestrians walk under red lanterns which was recently installed as Chinese New Year decorations, at Pudong Financial Area in Shanghai, January 24, 2014. REUTERS/Aly Song

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Related topics:
Geographies in DepthFinancial and Monetary SystemsEconomic Growth
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