The power of regions and cities to close the Circularity Gap

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Why CGR regions and cities?

Although national governments have a critical role to play in the design of circular strategies and roadmaps—especially as they hold the mandate to develop legislation and drive forward enabling incentives—subnational regions will also be crucial in accelerating circularity. Regions can work to bring governments closer to their communities and actively engage all relevant stakeholders to support access and broaden participation. They can understand their residents’ demands—and are often in a better position to respond to some of them. This makes regions and provinces critical facilitators for circularity, and positions them as key players in closing the Circularity Gap within their countries.

Circularity Gap Report for regions and cities

Regions are increasingly recognising the circular economy as a means to strengthen their communities and improve their residents' well-being, while contributing to their countries' environmental targets. However, circular solutions are not 'one size fits all': the most successful strategies are tailored and context-specific. The Circularity Gap Report for regions and provinces provides insights into the best interventions to boost circularity on a more local level, as well as the tools needed to monitor progress.

The case of Québec








The first regional Circularity Gap Report, published in partnership with RECYC-QUÉBEC, presents six scenarios to narrow Québec's Circularity Gap. While the world’s circularity sits at 8.6%, the Canadian province of Québec trails behind—cycling just 3.5% of the materials it consumes. The report presents circular strategies across six key sectors and highlights how Québec's circularity can climb from 3.5% to 9.8%, further outlining the co-benefits this transformational shift could bring.
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The case of Munich

Munich is one of Germany’s biggest and wealthiest cities. An innovation hub, a consumption hotspot and a magnet for talent, it represents the quintessential modern European city. But in upholding its lavish lifestyle and top-of-the-line industries, Munich draws a massive amount of resources from beyond its borders.

This makes it an ideal place to pioneer the Circularity Gap Report methodology at the city level. The outcomes are encouraging: the city is well-poised to scale its circular economy initiatives, with the analysis showing that it can use 43% less materials than it uses now while cutting its consumption-based CO2 emissions by 23%. The Circularity Gap Report Munich shows how to achieve this.
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The case of Montréal

Montréal, the second most populous city in Canada and Québec’s largest city, is a bustling centre of economic activity. The city's economy consumes an unsustainable amount of resources—extracted worldwide—which is leading to high levels of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and waste. The Circularity Gap Report Montréal offers a comprehensive set of baseline circularity indicators to empower local stakeholders to assess, track, and enhance circularity within the city and beyond, paving the way for a more resilient and low-carbon economy.
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The case of Richmond

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