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Condition of Circular Economy in Poland

Archives of Civil Engineering 2020 18 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 30 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
M. Bogdan, Monika Żubrowska-Sudoł, Małgorzata Wojtkowska, Monika Żubrowska-Sudoł, Z. Kledyński, Monika Żubrowska-Sudoł, Wioletta Jackiewicz-Rek, Krystyna Lelicińska-Serafin, Joanna Rucińska, Monika Żubrowska-Sudoł, Wioletta Jackiewicz-Rek, Agnieszka Machowska, Anna Rolewicz-Kalińska, Piotr Manczarski, Dagmara Masłowska, Justyna Walczak, T. Szczygielski, T. Szczygielski, Małgorzata Wojtkowska, Dagmara Masłowska

Summary

This article examines the state of circular economy implementation in Poland, reviewing policies, practices, and gaps in transitioning from a linear to a circular model for resource use and waste management. It is a policy and sustainability science study.

Study Type Environmental

The manuscript presents the condition of circular economy in Poland in diversified approach: subjective (waste streams, energy), sectoral (construction, wastewater treatment, coal energy), related to the resources (phosphorous and anthropogenic minerals) and considering proper energy management (almost zero energy buildings). The achievements reached in different sectors as well as the requirements towards implementation of CE are presented. The advancement of recycling technologies does not deviate from the global level, in terms of areas specific to Poland. Limiting the exploitation of natural resources and usage of new materials as well as producing more durable products are of CE concern. Also energy and heat recovery in buildings and technological processes (e.g. during wastewater treatment), ways of utilization of combustion by-products and water decarbonization waste are described. The implementation of CE in Poland needs not only research and technical activities, but also the modification of technological processes, the right policy, overcoming crosssectoral barriers, developing legal regulations and support schemes for CE.

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