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Challenges and opportunities for scaling up upcycling businesses – The case of textile and wood upcycling businesses in the UK

Singh, Jagdeep LU orcid ; Sung, Kyungeun ; Cooper, Tim ; West, Katherine and Mont, Oksana LU (2019) In Resources, Conservation and Recycling 150.
Abstract

Upcycling is a process in which used or waste products and materials are repaired, reused, repurposed, refurbished, upgraded and remanufactured in a creative way to add value to the compositional elements. It has been part of human life throughout history, and the past few years have seen its revival, driven by multiple factors including growing concern for the environment and resource scarcity. Upcycling increases quality and lifetimes of materials and products, reduces wastes, creates employment opportunities, and encourages sustainable consumer behaviour. Despite such benefits and increasing interest, upcycling is largely considered as a niche practice. One of the important gaps in the current state of knowledge on upcycling is a... (More)

Upcycling is a process in which used or waste products and materials are repaired, reused, repurposed, refurbished, upgraded and remanufactured in a creative way to add value to the compositional elements. It has been part of human life throughout history, and the past few years have seen its revival, driven by multiple factors including growing concern for the environment and resource scarcity. Upcycling increases quality and lifetimes of materials and products, reduces wastes, creates employment opportunities, and encourages sustainable consumer behaviour. Despite such benefits and increasing interest, upcycling is largely considered as a niche practice. One of the important gaps in the current state of knowledge on upcycling is a lack of systemic understanding about challenges and success factors relating to scaling up upcycling businesses. This paper aims to address this gap by employing a broad range of methods for reaching its goal, including literature review, stakeholder analysis, semi-structured interviews, group model building, development of causal loop diagrams, and a workshop with stakeholders and experts to validate causal loop diagrams and discuss promising interventions and how to proceed. The results identified potential actors for the success of upcycling businesses, key challenges and success factors, causal linkages among the challenges and success factors, key system mechanisms, and interventions for scaling up upcycling businesses. Collaboration across the upcycling value chain involving a wide range of actors is also discussed.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; ; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Challenges and success factors, Circular economy, Group model building, Scaling up, System interventions, Upcycling
in
Resources, Conservation and Recycling
volume
150
article number
104439
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85071279192
ISSN
0921-3449
DOI
10.1016/j.resconrec.2019.104439
project
Urban Reconomy: sharing for circular resource efficiency
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
2e5b934c-4acc-4ba4-bbf4-930a3a0c4e98
date added to LUP
2019-09-09 12:15:57
date last changed
2022-04-26 05:11:43
@article{2e5b934c-4acc-4ba4-bbf4-930a3a0c4e98,
  abstract     = {{<p>Upcycling is a process in which used or waste products and materials are repaired, reused, repurposed, refurbished, upgraded and remanufactured in a creative way to add value to the compositional elements. It has been part of human life throughout history, and the past few years have seen its revival, driven by multiple factors including growing concern for the environment and resource scarcity. Upcycling increases quality and lifetimes of materials and products, reduces wastes, creates employment opportunities, and encourages sustainable consumer behaviour. Despite such benefits and increasing interest, upcycling is largely considered as a niche practice. One of the important gaps in the current state of knowledge on upcycling is a lack of systemic understanding about challenges and success factors relating to scaling up upcycling businesses. This paper aims to address this gap by employing a broad range of methods for reaching its goal, including literature review, stakeholder analysis, semi-structured interviews, group model building, development of causal loop diagrams, and a workshop with stakeholders and experts to validate causal loop diagrams and discuss promising interventions and how to proceed. The results identified potential actors for the success of upcycling businesses, key challenges and success factors, causal linkages among the challenges and success factors, key system mechanisms, and interventions for scaling up upcycling businesses. Collaboration across the upcycling value chain involving a wide range of actors is also discussed.</p>}},
  author       = {{Singh, Jagdeep and Sung, Kyungeun and Cooper, Tim and West, Katherine and Mont, Oksana}},
  issn         = {{0921-3449}},
  keywords     = {{Challenges and success factors; Circular economy; Group model building; Scaling up; System interventions; Upcycling}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Resources, Conservation and Recycling}},
  title        = {{Challenges and opportunities for scaling up upcycling businesses – The case of textile and wood upcycling businesses in the UK}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.resconrec.2019.104439}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.resconrec.2019.104439}},
  volume       = {{150}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}