Ecoleasing
Ecoleasing is a system in which goods (mainly from the technical cycle, i.e. appliances, ...) are rented to a client for a certain period of time after which he returns the goods so the company that made it can recycle the materials.
Terminology
The term ecoleasing has been used by William McDonough and Michael Braungart in their book Cradle_to_Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things.[1] It is used to distinct itself from regular leasing in that:
- the operation is similar to regular purchasing of goods, so not requiring a contract to be made up as with leasing
- it is done with appliances and other products used for the household, rather than with land or very expensive products (cars, ...)
- the period of time the product is rented would be about the same as the lifespan of the product, so it can only be rented once before it is taken back by the company to recover the materials (and to create another product with it)
Examples
An example of ecoleasing is a lease of a TV set. In this case, a consumer signs a contract with the TV manufacturer. According to the contract, the consumer has a right to use the TV for e.g. 15,000 hours. After this period he returns the TV to the company, which then recycles it. Ecoleasing is usually done with appliances and other relatively cheap household products. It is hardly ever used for land, real estate, and expensive products.[2]
Advantages
- Since materials are reclaimed, fewer or no materials end up in landfills, or require other forms of waste disposal. As such, it is quite environmental.
- Materials are recovered by which the company can make new products, so the material costs for this new product are much lower for the company.
- Since new products can be made at a lower expense, the sale price of these products can also be comparatively lower than similar products made by the competition (if they use a system of purchasing the goods)
References
See also
- v
- t
- e
- Outline
- Index
- Anthropocene
- Business action on climate change
- Business ethics
- Co-benefits of climate change mitigation
- Corporate sustainability
- Earth system governance
- Ecological modernization
- Environmental governance
- Environmentalism
- Ethical consumerism
- Global catastrophic risk
- Green economy
- Green growth
- Human impact on the environment
- Longtermism
- Planetary boundaries
- Social sustainability
- Stewardship
- Sustainability studies
- Anthropization
- Anti-consumerism
- Circular economy
- Earth Overshoot Day
- Ecological footprint
- Ethical
- Green
- Micro-sustainability
- Over-consumption
- Product stewardship
- Simple living
- Social return on investment
- Steady-state economy
- Sustainability
- Sustainable
- Systemic change resistance
- Tragedy of the commons
- Appropriate
- Digital sustainability
- Ecotechnology
- Environmental technology
- Environmental design
- High-performance buildings
- Natural building
- Superinsulation
- Sustainability science
- Sustainable architecture
- Sustainable design
- Sustainable design standards
- Sustainable flooring
- Sustainable industries
- Sustainable lighting
- Sustainable packaging
- Sustainable transport
- Advertising
- Art
- Building insulation
- Business
- City
- Climate finance
- College programs
- Community
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- Ecovillage
- Education
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- Fashion
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conferences
- UN Conference on the Human Environment (Stockholm 1972)
- Brundtlandt Commission Report (1983)
- Our Common Future (1987)
- Earth Summit (1992)
- Rio Declaration on Environment and Development (1992)
- Agenda 21 (1992)
- Convention on Biological Diversity (1992)
- ICPD Programme of Action (1994)
- Lisbon Principles (1997)
- Kyoto Protocol (1997)
- Earth Charter (2000)
- UN Millennium Declaration (2000)
- Earth Summit 2002 (Rio+10, Johannesburg)
- UN Conference on Sustainable Development (Rio+20, 2012)
- Sustainable Development Goals (2015)
- Paris Agreement (2015)
- UN Ocean Conference (2017)