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Carl Dalhammar
Senior lecturer
![Carl Dalhammar](/sites/iiiee.lu.se/files/styles/lu_personal_page_desktop/public/2023-08/Carl%20Dalhammar%20.jpeg.webp?itok=UewpBQgF)
Product destruction: Exploring unsustainable production-consumption systems and appropriate policy responses
Author
Summary, in English
The practice of product destruction, whereby retailers or manufacturers dispose of viable consumer products such as unsold goods or customer returns, is an extreme expression of the linearity of our current production-consumption system. This qualitative exploratory study aims to uncover why companies engage in this highly unsustainable and resource-inefficient behaviour and to explore the potential policy interventions required to effectively address the issue. In-depth interviews were conducted with eleven experts from the textiles and electronics sectors to understand the driving forces behind this practice and provide a bottom-up perspective on appropriate policy interventions. The research identified two distinct sets of factors that contribute to product destruction. Upstream factors influence overall levels of customer returns and unsold stock and primarily include aspects of the retailer's business model, consumer expectations and product design. Downstream factors drive companies to dispose of these products rather than to pursue product life-extension strategies such as repair and reuse. Key downstream factors include economic incentives, profit-margin considerations, liability and brand integrity concerns, the availability of reuse networks and management issues. Consequently, to meaningfully address product destruction, a policy mix is required to simultaneously target upstream and downstream factors and change the behaviour of different actors, from manufacturers and retailers to consumers and reuse organisations.
Department/s
- The International Institute for Industrial Environmental Economics
- Centre for Environmental and Climate Science (CEC)
Publishing year
2023-01-01
Language
English
Pages
300-312
Publication/Series
Sustainable Production and Consumption
Volume
35
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Elsevier
Topic
- Economics and Business
Keywords
- sustainable consumption and production
- retail
- circular economy
- e-commerce
- policy
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 2352-5509