Maneesha P. Ginige, Andrew C. Warden, Anna H. Kaksonen
{"title":"迈向循环塑料经济:同步材料设计、混合加工、数字物流和适应性政策","authors":"Maneesha P. Ginige, Andrew C. Warden, Anna H. Kaksonen","doi":"10.1007/s11157-026-09773-7","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><p>The escalating environmental cost of global plastic production is driven by a fundamental misalignment: the complexity of modern polymer chemistry has outpaced the capability of linear waste management infrastructure. Addressing this crisis requires moving beyond fragmented mechanical and thermal solutions to a fully integrated industrial framework that synchronises material innovation with biological discovery. This review articulates a strategic roadmap to transition from a linear disposal model to a robust bio-industrial circular economy, with a predominant focus on the deployment of emerging bio-catalytic and bio-hybrid processing systems. We distinguish between the dual goals of resource recovery (circularity) and safe mineralisation (environmental resilience). Four interdependent pillars essential for this transition are identified: (1) Material design, where “design for degradation” is embedded at the molecular level; (2) Bio-hybrid processing, which supersedes single-mode recycling by synergising biological selectivity with physicochemical throughput (e.g., chemo-biological and photochemical-biological coupling) to handle mixed waste streams; (3) Digital logistics, utilising the “Internet of materials” to enable high-resolution sorting and decentralised processing; and (4) Adaptive policy, where standards are co-developed to verify system compatibility and increased stakeholder engagement. A “paradigm shift” is necessary to align these domains. Only by integrating the material, the process, the data, and the policy can plastic waste be transformed from an environmental liability into a predictable, high-value bio-industrial resource.</p></div>","PeriodicalId":754,"journal":{"name":"Reviews in Environmental Science and Bio/Technology","volume":"25 2","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":10.6000,"publicationDate":"2026-03-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s11157-026-09773-7.pdf","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Towards a circular plastics economy: synchronising material design, hybrid processing, digital logistics, and adaptive policy\",\"authors\":\"Maneesha P. Ginige, Andrew C. Warden, Anna H. 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Four interdependent pillars essential for this transition are identified: (1) Material design, where “design for degradation” is embedded at the molecular level; (2) Bio-hybrid processing, which supersedes single-mode recycling by synergising biological selectivity with physicochemical throughput (e.g., chemo-biological and photochemical-biological coupling) to handle mixed waste streams; (3) Digital logistics, utilising the “Internet of materials” to enable high-resolution sorting and decentralised processing; and (4) Adaptive policy, where standards are co-developed to verify system compatibility and increased stakeholder engagement. A “paradigm shift” is necessary to align these domains. 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Towards a circular plastics economy: synchronising material design, hybrid processing, digital logistics, and adaptive policy
The escalating environmental cost of global plastic production is driven by a fundamental misalignment: the complexity of modern polymer chemistry has outpaced the capability of linear waste management infrastructure. Addressing this crisis requires moving beyond fragmented mechanical and thermal solutions to a fully integrated industrial framework that synchronises material innovation with biological discovery. This review articulates a strategic roadmap to transition from a linear disposal model to a robust bio-industrial circular economy, with a predominant focus on the deployment of emerging bio-catalytic and bio-hybrid processing systems. We distinguish between the dual goals of resource recovery (circularity) and safe mineralisation (environmental resilience). Four interdependent pillars essential for this transition are identified: (1) Material design, where “design for degradation” is embedded at the molecular level; (2) Bio-hybrid processing, which supersedes single-mode recycling by synergising biological selectivity with physicochemical throughput (e.g., chemo-biological and photochemical-biological coupling) to handle mixed waste streams; (3) Digital logistics, utilising the “Internet of materials” to enable high-resolution sorting and decentralised processing; and (4) Adaptive policy, where standards are co-developed to verify system compatibility and increased stakeholder engagement. A “paradigm shift” is necessary to align these domains. Only by integrating the material, the process, the data, and the policy can plastic waste be transformed from an environmental liability into a predictable, high-value bio-industrial resource.
期刊介绍:
Reviews in Environmental Science and Bio/Technology is a publication that offers easily comprehensible, reliable, and well-rounded perspectives and evaluations in the realm of environmental science and (bio)technology. It disseminates the most recent progressions and timely compilations of groundbreaking scientific discoveries, technological advancements, practical applications, policy developments, and societal concerns encompassing all facets of environmental science and (bio)technology. Furthermore, it tackles broader aspects beyond the natural sciences, incorporating subjects such as education, funding, policy-making, intellectual property, and societal influence.