Sustainable consumption and resource management in the light of life cycle thinking

Approaches to address unsustainable ways of societal development constantly proliferate, but total consumption of resources and aggregate environmental impacts continue rising. This could partially be explained by weak attempts to develop comprehensive sustainability strategies that address the entire life cycle of products and especially resource extraction and use phases. This paper seeks to explore to what extent these life cycle stages and associated impacts are taken into account when various actors employ life cycle thinking and how these concerns can be better attended to in policy-making, business strategies and lifestyle choices. To accomplish this, we evaluate the efforts of the main stakeholders in reaching sustainable consumption and sustainable resource management, and impediments to further progress, and study whether and how deficits in these phases coincide and can potentially contribute to more holistic practical realization of life cycle thinking. We demonstrate that new approaches are needed to be able to tackle the international dimension of production and consumption.

[1]  S. Kasa US Trade Policy Power and Sustainable Consumption: Beef and Cars in North East Asia , 2003 .

[2]  H. Moll,et al.  Pursuing More Sustainable Consumption by Analyzing Household Metabolism in European Countries and Cities , 2005 .

[3]  C. Sanne Willing consumers—or locked-in? Policies for a sustainable consumption , 2002 .

[4]  Interdependence between consumption in the North and sustainable communities in the South , 2005 .

[5]  Stefan Bringezu,et al.  Policy review on decoupling : development of indicators to assess decoupling of economic development and environmental pressure in the EU-25 and AC-3 countries , 2005 .

[6]  Magnus Ericsson INDUSTRY REGISTERS RECORD INVESTMENT , 2005 .

[7]  L. Brown,et al.  State of the World , 1986 .

[8]  P. Brunner,et al.  Metabolism of the Anthroposphere , 1991 .

[9]  Manfred Lenzen,et al.  CO2 Multipliers in Multi-region Input-Output Models , 2004 .

[10]  Per Christensen,et al.  Different Lifestyles and their Impact on the Environment , 1997 .

[11]  Oksana Mont,et al.  Reaching Sustainable Consumption through the concept of a Product Service System (PSS) , 2001 .

[12]  Christa Liedtke,et al.  Studie zur Konzeption eines Programms für die Steigerung der Materialeffizienz in mittelständischen Unternehmen : Abschlussbericht , 2005 .

[13]  Raimund Bleischwitz,et al.  Eco-efficiency, regulation and sustainable business : towards a governance structure for sustainable development , 2004 .

[14]  Tim Jackson Live Better by Consuming Less?: Is There a “Double Dividend” in Sustainable Consumption? , 2005 .

[15]  Bernhard Truffer,et al.  User-led Innovation Processes: The Development of Professional Car Sharing by Environmentally Concerned Citizens , 2003 .

[16]  Ian Michael Wycherley,et al.  Greening supply chains: the case of The Body Shop International , 1999 .

[17]  L. Lovins,et al.  Factor Four – Doubling Wealth, Halving Resource Use , 1997, Energy Exploration & Exploitation.

[18]  H. Weisz,et al.  The Weight of Nations : Material Outflows from Industrial Economies , 2000 .

[19]  R. Howarth Status effects and environmental externalities , 1996 .

[20]  Joan Martinez-Alier,et al.  Trade and the environment: from a ‘Southern’ perspective , 2001 .

[21]  Michael Thompson,et al.  Making ends meet, in the household and on the planet , 1999 .

[22]  Stefan Bringezu,et al.  International comparison of resource use and its relation to economic growth: The development of total material requirement, direct material inputs and hidden flows and the structure of TMR , 2004 .

[23]  O. Mont,et al.  Sustainable Consumption. Research and Policies , 2005 .

[24]  Manfred Max-Neef,et al.  Economic growth and quality of life: a threshold hypothesis , 1995 .

[25]  Partha Dasgupta,et al.  Are We Consuming Too Much? , 2004 .

[26]  Raimund Bleischwitz,et al.  Governance of sustainable development: co-evolution of corporate and political strategies , 2004 .

[27]  A. Durning,et al.  How much is enough? : the consumer society and the future of the earth , 1992 .

[28]  E. Heiskanen The institutional logic of life cycle thinking , 2002 .

[29]  Tim Jackson Motivating Sustainable Consumption , 2008 .

[30]  Remko I. van Hoek,et al.  Case studies of greening the automotive supply chain through technology and operations , 2001 .

[31]  Raimund Bleischwitz,et al.  Eco-Efficiency, Regulation and Sustainable Business , 2004 .

[32]  Juliet B. Schor,et al.  Prices and quantities: Unsustainable consumption and the global economy , 2005 .

[33]  D. Reynolds The mineral economy: how prices and costs can falsely signal decreasing scarcity , 1999 .

[34]  Beatrice Kogg,et al.  Greening a cotton-textile supply chain: A case study of the transition towards organic production without a powerful foocal company , 2004 .