Viktor Varjú

Articles

A Holistic Self-Assessment Tool for Circular Economy Transitions in Cities and Regions

Alexander Wandl, Marcin Dąbrowski, Gilda Berruti, Arianne Acke, Andreas Obersteg, Viktor Varjú, Sue Ellen Taelman, Alessandro Arlati, Małgorzata Grodzicka-Kowalczyk, Maciej Kowalczyk

Europa XXI (2023) vol. 44, pp. 15-35 | Full text
doi: https://doi.org/10.7.7163/Eu21.2023.44.10

Further information

Abstract

In the European context, cities and regions play a key role in boosting circularity and achievethe European Green Deal action plan ambition to ‘boost the efficient use of resources by movingto a clean, circular economy’. To this end, cities and regions will be instrumental in promoting circularitythrough engagement with key actors and integration of circular economy (CE) goals within theirpolicies and spatial plans. To support this effort, it is essential to develop appropriate metrics and toolsfor evaluating the progress and transition towards a circular economy. Although numerous new assessmentmethodologies have been suggested (Corona et al., 2019), they generally focus on quantitatively assessinghow circular a project, system, or business is, or on evaluating the extent to which circular strategies alignwith the principles of a circular economy. Current metrics rarely extend beyond material sustainabilityassessments, which means they often do not capture the complexity of the CE transition and lacka comprehensive, integrated perspective. In particular, what they omit are the spatial (Williams, 2020),the governance (Korhonen et al., 2018) and the social dimensions (Pitkänen et al., 2020). In this paper, wepropose a holistic transition assessment tool developed and tested across several metropolitan regions,including Amsterdam, Naples, Łódź, Hamburg and Pécs, being at different stages of the circular economytransition. The final version of the tool was applied in two cases, the Amsterdam Metropolitan Areaand the city of Tomaszów Mazowiecki. The tool focuses on five dimensions: (1) governance structures,(2) awareness, comprehensiveness of the sustainability assessment, (3) tools for measuring materialstocks and flows as well as (4) for co-creation of solutions and strategies with stakeholders, and (5) circularbuilt environment. The results of applying the tool in a series of workshops with regional CE stakeholders allow for exploring the following questions: What is the state of the transition towards CE in Europeanurban regions from a holistic perspective? What hinders these transitions? And how to identify meansto overcome those barriers? The assessment tool is of interest for regional and urban policy-makers,planners and stakeholders engaged in development of CE strategies and policies. What is more, the resultspresented in the paper allow for comparative insights into the state of transition towards CE and for drawinglessons on what it takes to nudge the development of regions and cities towards circularity.

Keywords: circular economy, circular transition, governance, awareness, sustainability assessment

Alexander Wandl [a.wandl@tudelft.nl], Delft University of Technology, Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment, Department of Urbanism Julianalaan 134, 2628 BL Delft: The Netherlands
Marcin Dąbrowski, Delft University of Technology, Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment, Department of Urbanism Julianalaan 134, 2628 BL Delft: The Netherlands
Gilda Berruti [gberruti@unina.it], Federico II University of Naples, Department of Architecture Corso Umberto I 40 - 80138 Napoli: Italy
Arianne Acke, Public Waste Agency Flanders Stationsstraat 110 2800 Mechelen: Belgium
Andreas Obersteg, HafenCity Universität, Department of Urban Planning: HafenCity Universität Hamburg Henning-Voscherau-Platz, 120457 Hamburg: Germany
Viktor Varjú [varju.viktor@krtk.hun-ren.hu], HUN-REN Institute for Regional Studies KRTK; MATE VFGI; University of Pécs, Faculty of Humanities and Social Science 7621 Pécs, Papnövelde u. 22: Hungary
Sue Ellen Taelman, Department of Green Chemistry and Technology, Faculty of Bioscience Engineering, Ghent University Coupure Links 653, 9000 Gent: Belgium
Alessandro Arlati, HafenCity Universität, Department of Urban Planning: HafenCity Universität Hamburg Henning-Voscherau-Platz, 120457 Hamburg: Germany
Małgorzata Grodzicka-Kowalczyk, University of Lodz, Faculty of Economics and Sociology 3/5 P.O.W. Street, 90-255, Łódź: Poland / OLP Ltd (PHENO HORIZON) 25 Traugutta Street, 90-113 Łódź: Poland
Maciej Kowalczyk, OLP Ltd (PHENO HORIZON) 25 Traugutta Street, 90-113 Łódź: Poland

Citation

APA: Wandl, A., Dąbrowski, M., Berruti, G., Acke, A., Obersteg, A., Varjú, V., Taelman, S., Arlati, A., Grodzicka-Kowalczyk, M., & Kowalczyk, M. (2023). A Holistic Self-Assessment Tool for Circular Economy Transitions in Cities and Regions. Europa XXI, 44, 15-35. https://doi.org/10.7.7163/Eu21.2023.44.10
MLA: Wandl, Alexander, et al. "A Holistic Self-Assessment Tool for Circular Economy Transitions in Cities and Regions". Europa XXI, vol. 44, 2023, pp. 15-35. https://doi.org/10.7.7163/Eu21.2023.44.10
Chicago: Wandl, Alexander, Dąbrowski, Marcin, Berruti, Gilda, Acke, Arianne, Obersteg, Andreas, Varjú, Viktor, Taelman, Sue Ellen, Arlati, Alessandro, Grodzicka-Kowalczyk, Małgorzata, and Kowalczyk, Maciej. "A Holistic Self-Assessment Tool for Circular Economy Transitions in Cities and Regions". Europa XXI 44 (2023): 15-35. https://doi.org/10.7.7163/Eu21.2023.44.10
Harvard: Wandl, A., Dąbrowski, M., Berruti, G., Acke, A., Obersteg, A., Varjú, V., Taelman, S., Arlati, A., Grodzicka-Kowalczyk, M., & Kowalczyk, M. 2023. "A Holistic Self-Assessment Tool for Circular Economy Transitions in Cities and Regions". Europa XXI, vol. 44, pp. 15-35. https://doi.org/10.7.7163/Eu21.2023.44.10

Delays in Territorial Development – Case Study of the Hungarian Sand Ridge Region

András Donát Kovács, Jenő Zsolt Farkas, Viktor Varjú, Ádám Szalai, Edit Hoyk, József Lennert, Béla Csáki

Europa XXI (2023) vol. 44, pp. 161-176 | Full text
doi: https://doi.org/10.7163/Eu21.2023.44.3

Further information

Abstract

There are regions in Europe that are particularly vulnerable both environmentally and socially. Hungary's Sand Ridge in the Danube–Tisza Interfluve (Homokhátság in Hungarian) is considered such a region. The water balance of these lowland landscapes has been negative for decades, and complex ecological and social problems have escalated in parallel with aridification. Therefore, this region deserves special attention from the territorial development perspective. Over the last two decades, our successive studies have revealed that development policies in the region have been unsuccessful on multiple occasions, unable to alter the core negative trends significantly. We also noticed the mistakes and inertness of spatial planning when we worked on our current applied research: the Sand Ridge Regional Development Concept and Program. This study aims to explore deficiencies and shortcomings of the spatial policy and identify the factors that have slowed territorial development. Insights from interviews with experts and surveys conducted with local municipalities highlight that access to European Union funds has not alleviated long-standing conflicts. Resource-driven and uniform planning has become one of the main hindering factors. According to the experts, the necessary complex programs have not been implemented, and many initiatives have stalled. They also expressed concerns that Sand Ridge's natural and social endangerment will continue to increase.

Keywords: Homokhátság, Hungary, regional planning, Sand Ridge, spatial policy, territorial development

András Donát Kovács [kovacs.andrasdonat@krtk.hun-ren.hu], HUN-REN Centre for Economic and Regional Studies, Institute for Regional Studies 1097 Budapest Tóth Kálmán u. 4: Hungary
Jenő Zsolt Farkas [farkas.jenozsolt@krtk.hun-ren.hu], HUN-REN Centre for Economic and Regional Studies, Institute for Regional Studies 1097 Budapest Tóth Kálmán u. 4: Hungary
Viktor Varjú [varju.viktor@krtk.hun-ren.hu], HUN-REN Institute for Regional Studies KRTK; MATE VFGI; University of Pécs, Faculty of Humanities and Social Science 7621 Pécs, Papnövelde u. 22: Hungary
Ádám Szalai [szalai.adam@krtk.hun-ren.hu], HUN-REN Centre for Economic and Regional Studies, Institute for Regional Studies 1097 Budapest Tóth Kálmán u. 4: Hungary
Edit Hoyk [hoyk.edit@krtk.hun-ren.hu], HUN-REN Centre for Economic and Regional Studies, Institute for Regional Studies 1097 Budapest Tóth Kálmán u. 4: Hungary
József Lennert [lennert.jozsef@krtk.hun-ren.hu], HUN-REN Centre for Economic and Regional Studies, Institute for Regional Studies 1097 Budapest Tóth Kálmán u. 4: Hungary
Béla Csáki [csaki.bela@csongradcsanad.hu], Csongrád-Csanád County Municipality Office 6720, Szeged, Tisza Lajos krt. 2-4: Hungary

Citation

APA: Kovács, A., Farkas, J., Varjú, V., Szalai, ., Hoyk, E., Lennert, J., & Csáki, B. (2023). Delays in Territorial Development – Case Study of the Hungarian Sand Ridge Region. Europa XXI, 44, 161-176. https://doi.org/10.7163/Eu21.2023.44.3
MLA: Kovács, András Donát, et al. "Delays in Territorial Development – Case Study of the Hungarian Sand Ridge Region". Europa XXI, vol. 44, 2023, pp. 161-176. https://doi.org/10.7163/Eu21.2023.44.3
Chicago: Kovács, András Donát, Farkas, Jenő Zsolt, Varjú, Viktor, Szalai, Ádám, Hoyk, Edit, Lennert, József, and Csáki, Béla. "Delays in Territorial Development – Case Study of the Hungarian Sand Ridge Region". Europa XXI 44 (2023): 161-176. https://doi.org/10.7163/Eu21.2023.44.3
Harvard: Kovács, A., Farkas, J., Varjú, V., Szalai, ., Hoyk, E., Lennert, J., & Csáki, B. 2023. "Delays in Territorial Development – Case Study of the Hungarian Sand Ridge Region". Europa XXI, vol. 44, pp. 161-176. https://doi.org/10.7163/Eu21.2023.44.3