An Integrated Assessment Framework for Transition to Water Circularity
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Circular Economy in the Water Sector
1.2. Aim of the Study
2. Materials and Methods
3. Frameworks for Sustainability Transition
3.1. Multi-Level Perspective Framework
- Macro-level (Socio-technical Landscape): It includes changes in politics, social culture, worldviews, paradigms, and macroeconomic aspects. Those changes are called landscape developments, and their characteristics are as follows [1]: they are relatively slow, create undercurrents, and influence niche and regime levels. Social groups, scientists, firms, and entrepreneurs have a significant role in defining the landscape developments perceived by regime actors as pressures that can create opportunities for novelties [33,47].
- Meso-level (Socio-technical Regime): The socio-technical regime performs its intended function and is stable through the continuous interaction of its subsystems. However, this stability has a dynamic feature, as it allows innovation to occur at a gradual pace [33]. At this meso-level, existing actors, institutions, and networks of actors adhere to the current rules, standards, methods, and interests set in the technical system [47]. Thus, the embeddedness of a technological regime is a function of cognitive routines [48], rules and standards [49], lifestyle adjustment according to the technical system, high infrastructure, and investment costs [50,51]. This configuration complicates the inclusion of new technological innovations and stabilises certain technologies [33].
- Micro-level (Niche-innovations): At this level, dedicated individuals or a network of actors develop unstable socio-technical innovations. Those individuals take the first steps toward possible transition by improving their learning processes and eventually creating new practices or behaviour [47]. This level is vital to allow change, as it comprises the space needed to develop deviating methods and technologies [33].
3.2. Institutional Work for Technology Legitimation
- Regulative legitimacy is the capacity to set up rules and assess others’ congruence to them;
- Normative legitimacy is the active judgment of whether a solution fits social values and norms in a manner that enhances societal welfare;
- Cognitive legitimacy is a passive assumption that an organisation is comprehensible and taken for granted;
- Pragmatic legitimacy is based on the self-interest calculations of benefits brought by a circular solution to its end users.
- Advocacy: Actors using direct social persuasion techniques and organising direct networks to mobilise support at the political and regulatory levels.
- Political work: Via political power to directly attain precise goals.
- Changing normative associations: Actors altering the connections between practices and their moral and cultural foundations.
- Constructing normative networks: Construct connections between different organisations to sanction some practices normatively and form the relevant peer group responsible for monitoring and evaluation.
- Mimicry: Link new practices with prevailing technologies, social and legal rules, and taken-for-granted practices.
- Theorising: Develop and stipulate specific abstract categories and explain cause and effect chains.
- Educating: Improve actors’ skills and knowledge that are necessary for supporting new institutions.
- Valorising and demonising: Provide positive or negative examples that show the institution’ normative foundation, such as awards.
- Mythologising: Keeping the institution’s normative foundations by making and maintaining myths about its history.
- Imagery: Use images that create fear, anxiety, joy, or comfort.
3.3. WICER Framework Circularity Assessment
- Deliver resilient and inclusive services: diversifying supply sources, optimising the use of existing infrastructure, and planning and investing for climate and non-climate uncertainties.
- Design out waste and pollution: being energy efficient and using renewable energy; optimising operations and recovering resources.
- Preserve and regenerate natural systems: incorporating nature-based solutions; restoring degraded land and watersheds; and recharging and managing aquifers.
4. An Integrated Framework to Access the Transition towards a Circular Water Economy
4.1. Framework Overview
- An analysis of the water sector’s socio-technical system produces information on the context-specific climatic, social, economic, and environmental conditions;
- The selected technologies’ circularity level is assessed according to the identified contextual conditions;
- An assessment of the circular technologies’ legitimacy according to the identified contextual conditions;
- The identification of legitimation actions to support the adoption of alternative circular technologies.
4.2. Description of Stages
4.2.1. Stage 1: Describing and Understanding the Water Context
4.2.2. Stage 2: Assessment of the Selected Technologies’ Circularity Level
4.2.3. Stage 3: Assessment of the Alternative Circular Technologies’ Legitimacy
- Regulative barriers concerning legal frameworks and regulations;
- Normative barriers concerning norms and values;
- Cognitive barriers concerning knowledge and capabilities;
- Pragmatic barriers concerning social, economic, and environmental benefits.
4.2.4. Stage 4: Identify Legitimation Actions to Support the Upscale of Alternative Circular Technologies
5. Application of the Framework in a Real-Life Case
5.1. Stage 1: Describing and Understanding the Water Context
5.2. Stage 2: Assessment of the Selected Technologies’ Circularity Level
5.3. Stage 3: Assessment of the Alternative Circular Technologies’ Legitimacy
5.4. Stage 4: Identify Legitimation Actions to Support the Upscale of Alternative Circular Technologies
6. Discussion
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Level | Examples of Analytical Questions |
Landscape |
|
Regime | Infrastructural
|
Actors and network of actors
| |
Environmental
| |
Legal
| |
Niche |
|
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Afghani, N.; Hamhaber, J.; Frijns, J. An Integrated Assessment Framework for Transition to Water Circularity. Sustainability 2022, 14, 8533. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14148533
Afghani N, Hamhaber J, Frijns J. An Integrated Assessment Framework for Transition to Water Circularity. Sustainability. 2022; 14(14):8533. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14148533
Chicago/Turabian StyleAfghani, Nof, Johannes Hamhaber, and Jos Frijns. 2022. "An Integrated Assessment Framework for Transition to Water Circularity" Sustainability 14, no. 14: 8533. https://doi.org/10.3390/su14148533