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Title: What is Eco-Industrial Development? Sponsored by City of


1
What is Eco-Industrial Development?
Sponsored byCity of Modesto Presented by The
National Center for Eco-Industrial DevelopmentA
Joint Project of the University of Southern
California and Cornell University ModestoMarch
12, 2003
2
The National Center for Eco-Industrial
Development
  • Grew out of a partnership between Leonard
    Mitchell (USC) and the late Ed Cohen-Rosenthal
    (Cornell University)
  • to develop tools to expand the development of
    eco-industrial parks through-out the United
    States
  • Funded by the Economic Development
    Administration, U.S. Department of Commerce and
    the Environmental Protection Agency

3
Mission
  • The mission of the National Center for
    Eco-industrial Development is to facilitate job
    creation and sustainable industrial expansion in
    distressed communities around the nation by
    applying principles of industrial ecology
    establishing eco-industrial parks, and expanding
    use of environmentally benign manufacturing
    processes and techniques.

4
Outline
  • What is Eco-Industrial Development?
  • Industrial Ecology
  • Eco-Industrial Development
  • Eco-Industrial Parks
  • Eco-Industrial Networks
  • Benefits
  • Risks
  • Conditions for Favorable Eco-Industrial
    Development
  • Examples of Eco-Industrial Development

5
Eco-Industrial Development
  • Concept and Approaches
  • Pollution prevention/Waste minimization
  • Byproduct exchange
  • Green design
  • Life cycle analysis
  • Technological innovation
  • Optimizing resource use
  • Fostering networks among businesses

6
Industrial Ecology
  • "One of the most important concepts of industrial
    ecology is that, like the biological system, it
    rejects the concept of waste."
  • - T. Graedel and B. Allenby, Industrial Ecology,
    1995

Waste equals food An ecological model of
commerce would imply that all wastes have value
to other modes of production so that everything
is either reclaimed, reused, or recycledThe
restorative economy comes down to this We need
to imagine a prosperous commercial culture that
is so intelligently designed and constructed that
it mimics nature at every step, a symbiosis of
company and customer and ecology. - Paul Hawken,
The Ecology of Commerce, 1993
7
Domains of Industrial Ecology
  • Technical
  • Engineering perspective with technological
    innovation
  • Business System and Networks
  • Shared services, transportation, and facilities
  • Community-Business Interactions
  • Symbiotic networks
  • 3 Es Economy, Environment, Equity

Source Mary Schlarb. Eco-Industrial
Development A Strategy for Building Sustainable
Communities, 2001
8
Forms of Eco-Industrial Development
  • Eco-Industrial Parks
  • Co-located businesses
  • Closed loop with significant byproducts
  • Continuous environmental and societal
    improvements
  • Eco-Industrial Networks
  • Virtual EIPs Regional waste exchange network
  • Optimize material flow efficiencies and scale
    economies through resource recovery and exchange
  • EIN can bring scale economies required for
    developing a byproduct market

9
Industrial Symbiosis Kalundborg, Denmark
10
Eco-Industrial Development Strategies
  • Resource Recovery, Pollution Prevention, and
    Cleaner Production
  • Integration into Natural Ecosystems
  • Industrial Clustering
  • Green Design
  • Anchor Tenant
  • Life Cycle Assessment
  • Deconstruction and De-manufacturing
  • Environmental Management Systems
  • Technological Innovation Continuous
    Environmental Improvement
  • Job Training
  • Public Participation and Collaboration

Source Mary Schlarb. Eco-Industrial
Development A Strategy for Building Sustainable
Communities, 2001
11
Benefits
  • Economic Efficiency and Profitability
  • Job Creation
  • Improved business attraction, expansion,
    retention
  • Community Development
  • Local import substitution
  • Environmental justice
  • Brownfields redevelopment
  • Public-private partnerships
  • Environmental Stewardship

Source Mary Schlarb. Eco-Industrial
Development A Strategy for Building Sustainable
Communities, 2001
12
Environmental Benefits
  • Reduced greenhouse gas emissions
  • Reduced air emissions improved community health
  • Promotion of pollution prevention the 4 Rs
  • Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, Recover
  • Improved resource conservation
  • Promotion of green technology
  • Increased environmental awareness
  • Regeneration of green space

13
Risks
  • Financial
  • Interdependence
  • Transaction costs
  • Regulatory
  • Environmental

Source Mary Schlarb. Eco-Industrial
Development A Strategy for Building Sustainable
Communities, 2001
14
Conditions Favorable for EID
  • Supply of by-products must meet demand (and vice
    versa)
  • Form relationships based on connections or
    institutional framework to reduce transaction
    costs
  • Proximity to compatible firms with stable supply
    and quality of byproducts
  • Regulations that penalize waste and provide
    firms incentives to seek symbiotic relationships
    with other firms

Source Mary Schlarb. Eco-Industrial
Development A Strategy for Building Sustainable
Communities, 2001
15
Examples of Eco-Industrial Development
  • Port of Cape Charles Sustainable Technologies
    Industrial Park, Virginia
  • Green Institute, Minneapolis, MN
  • Phillips Eco-Enterprise Center
  • Londonderry Ecological Industrial Park

16
By-Product Exchange
Scrap Wood
Sawdust
Furniture Factory
Particle Board Factory
Recycled Paper Manufacturer
WastePaper
Municipal Recovery Facility
Aquaculture
Biomass
Steam
Steam
Cogeneration Facility
Ethanol Production
17
By-Product Exchange
  • Ethanol
  • By-Products
  • Lignin
  • Gypsum
  • Yeast

Ethanol Plant
Potential Exchange Partners Wallboard
Manufacturer Animal Feed Manufacturer
Major Inputs
Agricultural residues or Wood wastes Sulfuric
Acid Steam
from a Cogeneration Facility
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