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Title Circular economy in the Australian AEC industry: investigation of barriers and enablers
ID_Doc 28746
Authors Shooshtarian, S; Hosseini, MR; Kocaturk, T; Arnel, T; Garofano, NT
Title Circular economy in the Australian AEC industry: investigation of barriers and enablers
Year 2023
Published Building Research And Information, 51.0, 1
DOI 10.1080/09613218.2022.2099788
Abstract The architecture, engineering and construction (AEC) industry has a reputation for low resource efficiency worldwide. Policymakers are exploring various avenues to address the issue, with one option being a shift toward a circular economy (CE). However, first one must identify how the relevant stakeholders perceive the concept. Hence, this study aimed to elicit stakeholders' perceptions about CE and identify the main barriers and enablers affecting its adoption in the Australian context. A total of 132 respondents representing various stakeholder groups were surveyed. The findings revealed that only participants' awareness of CE has a meaningful link with adoption; and this has a statistically significant association with major CE adoption indicators (i.e. adoption, willingness to apply, level of agreement on considering CE as business ethics and that CE is beneficial). The top three barriers were a: 'lack of incentives'; 'lack of specific regulations'; and a 'lack of knowledge'. The three top enablers were reported to be 'R&D of enabling technologies', 'educate project stakeholders' and 'provide evidence for the CE added value'. This paper could inform policy development activities in the Australian context and provides the foundation for a roadmap to a CE within the national AEC industry.
Author Keywords Circular business models; infrastructure; construction and demolition waste management; productivity; sustainable construction; resource efficiency
Index Keywords Index Keywords
Document Type Other
Open Access Open Access
Source Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
EID WOS:000836045900001
WoS Category Construction & Building Technology
Research Area Construction & Building Technology
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