The Scotsman

Why ditching disposable culture could be worth £1.5bn

● Minimising waste could also greatly reduce Scotland’s carbon emissions

- By ALISON CAMPSIE

Scotland’s economy could be boosted by at least £1.5bn a year by shifting away from our disposable culture with the potential to create a whole new generation of jobs, products and services as a result, it has been claimed.

Moving towards a circular economy, which minimises what is thrown away by finding new and profitable uses for waste while promoting remanufact­ure and alternativ­es to ownership, could also reduce the country’s carbon emissions by around 11 million tonnes by 2050.

Creating a circular economy is now a key area of Scottish Government work with an £18m fund set up by Zero Waste Scotland to help businesses adapt to the new way of doing things.

A growing number of entreprene­urs are already seizing opportunit­ies, including the Angus farmer who makes vodka out of potatoes rejected by supermarke­ts and the Fife-based scientists who turn fibres from discarded sugar beet root into a sustainabl­e, thickening product for paint and other industrial products.

Research is also ongoing how £50m worth of gold can be extracted from mobile phones in circulatio­n in Scotland so the precious metal can be re-used rather than thrown away.

Iain Gulland, chief executive of Zero Waste Scotland, said it was “exciting times” as the appetite for the circular economy in Scotland grew, with the country seen as leading the way in the field given the financial support available for business wanting to move away from the linear “take, make, dispose” economic model.

Mr Gulland said: “It is really about making things last longer and about getting people to think differentl­y about the products, materials and services they are using.

“In everyday life, it is about how we can reuse and repair them and I think that resonates with people, who I think are frustrated with modern gadgets and all the things that can’t be repaired and which people are really forced to throw away and buy something new to replace it.

“It’s about making things more productive within our economy.”

Mr Gulland said the public was already tapping into the circular economy with services such as Netflix and Spotify, which the consumer can lease instead of physically owning a product.

He added that the kilt – and how it was leased or owned – was also a very strong example of the model at work.

Mr Gulland said: “Men either lease a kilt for a special occasion or they will own a kilt for the whole of their life, and sometimes pass it on. They are designed in such a way to last your whole life and can be adjusted to size. They are a very durable product.”

Remanufact­uring, which promotes reuse and repair of products, is already worth £1.1bn to the Scottish economy with potential to grow by £620 million by 2020, adding 5,700 new jobs, Mr Gulland said.

The food and drink industry is also crucial to the growth of the circular economy with an estimated £500m and £800m worth of savings and new investment identified primarily through new uses of byproducts.

Farmer Graeme Jarron, of Ogilvy Spirits, based near Glamis, Angus, launched his vodka last year after finding a way to generate profit from potatoes rejected by supermarke­ts.

He said: “there is nothing worse as a farmer to see what you produce go to waste. We are trying to show others what can be done. We are by no means at the forefront of this but we have tried to increase the business with what we have.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? 0 Graeme Jarron of Ogilvy Spirits and his wife Caroline are Scotland’s first potato vodka producers.
0 Graeme Jarron of Ogilvy Spirits and his wife Caroline are Scotland’s first potato vodka producers.
 ??  ?? 0 Iain Gulland is director of Zero Waste Scotland
0 Iain Gulland is director of Zero Waste Scotland

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