Industrial Ecology
Industrial ecology takes a holistic view of industrial
systems. It balances industrial development with the sustainable use of
natural resources, and likens industrial systems to natural systems. The
concept of industrial ecology promotes a shift away from open, linear
systems towards systems similar to those found in nature, where
processes are interacting systems rather than isolated components.
Two examples of industrial ecology are industrial
symbiosis and 'clustering'. Industrial symbiosis internalizes
environmental costs into production and consumption processes.
Industrial clusters, or eco-industrial parks, take advantage of the
outputs of co-located operations, turning wastes into raw materials.
To implement industrial symbiosis, companies create
complex networks of material flows, developing sets of linkages
throughout their operations to increase the efficiency of material and
energy throughput. These links enable companies to capture emissions and
wastes and to recycle them back into other processes as inputs.
Based on this approach GTZ is developing pilot
applications of Eco-Industrial Parks
(download, pdf-file, 400 kb, 48 S.).
In Indonesia and Thailand for example, it is thought
of using the PREMA
approach and especially the Good Housekeeping approach to also stimulate
companies to tap all process-integrated in-house optimization potentials
while looking for synergies in eco-industrial parks.
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