『Ecovillages as laboratories for circular economies: Transforming Waste into Wealth through Regenerative Community Design』のカバーアート

Ecovillages as laboratories for circular economies: Transforming Waste into Wealth through Regenerative Community Design

Ecovillages as laboratories for circular economies: Transforming Waste into Wealth through Regenerative Community Design

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2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

Ecovillages are intentional communities established with the goal of improving social, cultural, economic, and ecological sustainability through locally owned, participatory methods. These settlements act as living laboratories by seeking alternatives to environmentally damaging systems and testing regenerative practices that can be scaled for broader society. In this podcast, we explore how circular economy strategies—aiming to eliminate waste and circulate materials—are successfully integrated into the fabric of these communities.

We feature real-world case studies demonstrating circularity in action. In Findhorn Ecovillage, Scotland, residents generate renewable energy via wind and solar power while operating their own biological sewage plant to recycle wastewater for irrigation. The Awra Amba community in Ethiopia utilizes organic agriculture and recycling programs to achieve self-reliance and environmental preservation. Meanwhile, in Bendungan Village, Indonesia, the implementation of "garbage banks" and specialized machinery allows residents to turn plastic waste into pavement blocks and organic waste into fuel briquettes, creating alternative income while restoring the local river ecosystem.

The episode also examines the shift from a linear "take-make-waste" mindset to the 9R framework of circularity, focusing on Refuse, Rethink, and Repair at the household level. By embracing shared resources—such as the communal utilities and housing designs seen in Hanover’s Ecovillage—these communities minimize their individual footprints while maximizing their collective social and ecological "handprint". Finally, we discuss how closing nutrient loops through permaculture and organic farming ensures that materials are returned to the earth's biogeochemical cycles to nourish future growth.

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