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Circular economy
Traditionally, manufacturers would make
a product to be used and disposed of by
consumers. This linear model of production
offered no help in the fight against global
waste. Alternatively, a circular economy
was introduced. This is a system which aims
to minimize waste and restore used materials.
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materials are recycled and returned to
manufactures. The outcome is less waste. One
large-scale example of this is happening on the
island of Taiwan.
4-in-1 Recycling Program
In 1997, Taiwan established its signature 4-in-1
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recycling enterprises, government cleaning teams
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recycling locations. The local government
collection teams and private collectors collect
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from them to generate revenue. Importers and
manufacturers who are responsible for the
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of the program used to subsidize the recycling
disposal system, support education and research
and development as well as finance recycling
efforts in the future.
© Shutterstock.com (X2)
Circular economy in action!
One example is sportswear giant
Nike deciding to use plastic bottles
to weave together teams’ jerseys
for the 2019 Women’s World Cup.
In 2016, The Wall Street Journal
reported on the island’s recycling
success rate in an article titled
“Taiwan: The World’s Geniuses of
Garbage Disposal.” With a recycling
rate of 55 percent among those
living there, it is a world leader.
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