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Demonstrating reuse of EEE in a distinct urban mine: a case study

Demonstrating reuse of EEE in a distinct urban mine: a case study
Demonstrating reuse of EEE in a distinct urban mine: a case study
At the heart of the circular economy model is the reorientation of consumer behaviours away from disposing of items before they reach end of their functional life as a step towards resource efficiency and reduction of environmental impacts. One way to facilitate this change is to enable proactive redistribution of electrical and electronic equipment (EEE) with reuse value from urban spaces followed by high quality recycling at end-of-life. We have conducted the first assessment and critical evaluation of a model for the recovery of reusable EEE from a distinct urban mine (DUM) - in this case, a university. The Infrastructure, Service and Behaviour (ISB) model was used as a guide for interventions. EEE recovered from two Halls of Residence at the University of Southampton were characterised and sorted. From the items inspected, 97% was reusable and were donated to participating charities for redistribution via reuse/sale. The results show that an ISB Model system designed using choice architecture to recover reusable EEE from a DUM contributes strongly to extending products’ lifetimes and promotes circular economy ambitions. The study provides strong evidence of a viable reuse-based recovery system for small EEE in a university DUM and with a potential for replicability at global scale. It is recommended that a carefully planned and tailored system based on the ISB model should be put in place in universities for the recovery and redistribution of reusable EEE (ReEEE) and that recycling is implemented only after practical options for reuse have been exhausted.
2611-4135
78-93
Shittu, Olanrewaju S.
faaa3663-4cad-4f5a-877a-e935534050b1
Williams, Ian D.
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Shaw, Peter
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Montiero, Natalie
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Creffield, Rhiannon
b532ceb2-17ee-4b41-b1dd-b04f347f0bc3
Shittu, Olanrewaju S.
faaa3663-4cad-4f5a-877a-e935534050b1
Williams, Ian D.
c9d674ac-ee69-4937-ab43-17e716266e22
Shaw, Peter
935dfebf-9fb6-483c-86da-a21dba8c1989
Montiero, Natalie
c366344d-d38b-41ed-b134-6971e7a64894
Creffield, Rhiannon
b532ceb2-17ee-4b41-b1dd-b04f347f0bc3

Shittu, Olanrewaju S., Williams, Ian D., Shaw, Peter, Montiero, Natalie and Creffield, Rhiannon (2021) Demonstrating reuse of EEE in a distinct urban mine: a case study. Detritus, 15, 78-93. (doi:10.31025/2611-4135/2021.15091).

Record type: Article

Abstract

At the heart of the circular economy model is the reorientation of consumer behaviours away from disposing of items before they reach end of their functional life as a step towards resource efficiency and reduction of environmental impacts. One way to facilitate this change is to enable proactive redistribution of electrical and electronic equipment (EEE) with reuse value from urban spaces followed by high quality recycling at end-of-life. We have conducted the first assessment and critical evaluation of a model for the recovery of reusable EEE from a distinct urban mine (DUM) - in this case, a university. The Infrastructure, Service and Behaviour (ISB) model was used as a guide for interventions. EEE recovered from two Halls of Residence at the University of Southampton were characterised and sorted. From the items inspected, 97% was reusable and were donated to participating charities for redistribution via reuse/sale. The results show that an ISB Model system designed using choice architecture to recover reusable EEE from a DUM contributes strongly to extending products’ lifetimes and promotes circular economy ambitions. The study provides strong evidence of a viable reuse-based recovery system for small EEE in a university DUM and with a potential for replicability at global scale. It is recommended that a carefully planned and tailored system based on the ISB model should be put in place in universities for the recovery and redistribution of reusable EEE (ReEEE) and that recycling is implemented only after practical options for reuse have been exhausted.

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DETRITUS 15-2021_pages 78-93_DJ-20-085 - Version of Record
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 28 April 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 30 June 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 457732
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/457732
ISSN: 2611-4135
PURE UUID: ed8b8864-86b0-4a71-b505-a9ecc6c29981
ORCID for Olanrewaju S. Shittu: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7494-4229
ORCID for Ian D. Williams: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0121-1219
ORCID for Peter Shaw: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0925-5010

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Date deposited: 16 Jun 2022 00:27
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:01

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Contributors

Author: Olanrewaju S. Shittu ORCID iD
Author: Ian D. Williams ORCID iD
Author: Peter Shaw ORCID iD
Author: Natalie Montiero
Author: Rhiannon Creffield

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