Sustainable Materials Management

Since the early 1980s, OECD has been developing and promulgating international policies aimed at preventing and reducing waste generation and managing the residues in an environmentally sound manner. It has, however, become evident that waste minimisation policies which address only end-of-life products and materials are not effective in reducing increasing amounts of waste associated with economic activity and material consumption. This accentuates the need for creative and far-sighted and integrated solutions, using life-cycle thinking to reduce the negative environmental impacts of materials in a cost-effective manner.

 

The OECD Environmental Strategy, adopted by Environment Ministers in May 2001, clearly outlines the need for governments to look for integrated solutions such as SMM, to address current environmental concerns.

 

Against this background OECD initiated in 2004 new work on Sustainable Materials Management (SMM). OECD countries are demonstrating a growing interest in considering wastes as potential resources that can be used as inputs for new products. Such use of wastes can result in less virgin material extraction with related reduction of negative environmental impacts, less disposal and often less processing of waste. In this context, a number of OECD countries are trying to move away from a heavily waste-oriented view and develop materials-based approaches and shift the “cradle-to-grave” thinking towards “cradle-to-cradle” thinking.

 

As a starting point for this work, a first OECD workshop on SMM was held in November 2005 in Seoul, Korea, to take stock of existing understandings on and approaches towards SMM, explore the potential elements of SMM and provide guidance for OECD's future work in this area. The workshop outcome provided, among others, the following working definition for SMM:

 

“Sustainable Materials Management is an approach to promote sustainable materials use, integrating actions targeted at reducing negative environmental impacts and preserving natural capital throughout the life-cycle of materials, taking into account economic efficiency and social equity.”

 

A second workshop was held in April 2008, Tel-Aviv, Israel, focusing on the contributions by the private sector to SMM, but also by NGOs and international organisations. The workshop report  provides a summary of discussions. More specifically, the workshop:


Currently the SMM work is focusing on policies and instruments that would be useful for promoting SMM, and for contributing to implementation of the (2008) OECD Council Recommendation on Resource Productivity [C(2008)40].

 

To this end a Global Forum on Environment focusing on Sustainable Materials Management was held on 25-27 October 2010 in Mechelen, Belgium. The Forum discussed the key challenges of SMM and the policy measures that need to be undertaken to implement the SMM approach, based on a number of SMM policy papers and case studies. These have been published and are available to download:

 

 

Materials case studies:

 

Policy reports:

 

 

The work on SMM is carried out in close collaboration with the OECD programme on material flows and resource productivity that includes the establishment of a common knowledge base to enable sound fact-based Material Flow Analysis (MFA) and to inform related policy discussions, such as SMM. To learn more about OECD work on MFA, please visit the following website: www.oecd.org/environment/resourceefficiency.

 

A result of this collaboration is a report on “Resource Productivity in the G8 and the OECD – A Report in the framework of the Kobe 3R Action Plan”. This report responds to a request by G8 Environment Ministers at their meeting in Kobe in 2008. It presents key trends and main policy developments related to resource productivity in OECD countries, with a particular focus on efforts on sustainable materials management. It identifies the main policy challenges and opportunities and discusses the steps that need to be taken to achieve further progress.

 

The work on SMM is also closely linked to an OECD project on Eco-innovation and Sustainable Manufacturing. Innovation in technologies and how it is applied are key to enabling industry to create new business values while also benefiting  people and the planet. In recent years, manufacturing companies have been re-directing their efforts towards sustainable manufacturing to integrate approaches that take into account the product’s life-cycle impacts (www.oecd.org/sti/innovation/sustainablemanufacturing).

 

Greenhouse Gas Mitigation and Materials Management

OECD is exploring a new integrated approach, SMM, which addresses the management, in a cost-effective manner, of materials throughout their life-cycle.  It also ensures that the negative impacts from material use and consumption are not relegated to the end of the material's chain.

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