The Circular Economy Development Center
Innovative, Collaborative Circular Solutions Built for Colorado
Advancing Business Development in Colorado: Innovative Solutions for a Sustainable Circular Economy
Every year, Americans throw out approximately 300 million tons of products—and just a fraction of those products are revitalized, recycled, and/or reused. That figure likely includes your product(s), along with thousands of others that were thrown out well before the end of their usable lifespan.
So, consider this: you know where your product’s life cycle begins, but where does it end? For many business owners, that’s not an easy question to answer—and that’s why we’re here.
The Circular Economy Development Center is dedicated to helping Colorado’s businesses transition toward a more sustainable future, achieve the maximum value from their products, and ultimately, reimagine the relationship between our economy and the environment.
A better future for products (and the planet) starts with you. Keep reading to learn more about the CEDC, what we do, and how we’re helping Colorado’s industry move toward a circular economy.
Our Key Objectives
1 Expand three markets that already exist in Colorado and create three new markets.
End Market
An end market typically refers to the end user of a product, the individual or organization for whom the product or service has been created, and who is not expected to resell that product or service.
New Market
A new market, by CEDC definition, is a market for a material that does not currently have any existing market in Colorado and minimal (if any) options outside of Colorado. An example would be demolition of post-consumer drywall.
Existing Market
An existing market, by CEDC definition, is a market for a material that has market options but the majority of the material is currently leaving Colorado to get to market. Example materials would be aluminum, cardboard, and most plastics.
2 Engage with stakeholders state-wide, creating physical and virtual spaces for collaboration and innovation.
Creating sustainable, circular economies requires a holistic approach. We aim to work closely with stakeholders (statewide and regionally) to provide a platform for business collaboration, innovation, and problem-solving.
3 Analyze markets and supply chains, including transportation and manufacturing, to show how materials flow within Colorado and regionally.
Understanding regional markets and supply chains is critical to identifying opportunities for circularity. We will complete a gap analysis that focuses on commodity movement, Colorado’s manufacturing opportunities, local and regional end markets, and business development prospects.
What is a Circular Economy?
Circular Economy: An industrial system that is restorative or regenerative by design. In other words, a circular business model uses resources efficiently and prioritizes renewable inputs.
Circular economies maximize a product’s usable lifespan to achieve maximum value. At the end of the product’s life, the product and any by-products in its manufacturing are recovered and reused to make new materials or products.
In a circular economy, products are no longer designed to have a life cycle with a distinct beginning, middle, and end.
Designers and business owners play an essential role in choosing materials that are fit for the circular economy. Not all materials are suitable for use in circular products because they contain chemicals that may be polluting or potentially hazardous for humans and/or the environment.
Similarly, recyclers, waste disposal professionals, and many others are vital to the success of a circular economy, particularly when it comes to keeping products out of our landfills.
What is the Circular Economy Development Center?
The Circular Economy Development Center is a program of the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment aimed at empowering and facilitating connections between sectors in Colorado and regionally to create circular economy solutions using materials that Coloradans recycle.
In other words, we aim to provide circular solutions and to foster the round-table discussions that lead us there. We’re not here to “paint with a broad brush.” We engage and work closely with stakeholders to mediate solutions that work for our businesses, communities, and environment alike.
Ultimately, our goal is to create individual, scalable pathways toward circular economies—and step one is creating beneficial collaboration and innovation between Colorado businesses.
Our mission: We assist companies striving for circularity by helping them advance their business or locate to Colorado.
What We Do
The Circular Economy Development Center is the nucleus of circular solutions. Focused on business, the Circular Economy Development Center helps companies transform wasteful linear consumption models to circular ones through:
- Facilitating solutions to redesign and remanufacture products, resources and materials
- Co-creating new, innovative circular business models
- Offering business and economic development expertise
- Coalescing sectors to form collaborative solutions
The Circular Economy Development Center provides guidance, access to resources and technical assistance and funding (when available) to generate and support circular-economic development.
The Circular Economy Development Center can help you define what’s material for you in terms of both circularity and corporate financial performance. Like a North Star, good materiality assessments are a crucial ESG (environmental, social and governance) tool that also engages stakeholders to find out what they expect. Stakeholders can make or break a business, and we help you discover what they need in circularity.
The Circular Economy Development Center can help you pinpoint who and where suppliers are, what they do for a company and the impacts of their activities. Also a bedrock ESG activity, value/supply-chain mapping can be big work because it makes visible the invisible and it, too, provides information about supplier materials, resources and greenhouse gas emissions. Like a snapshot, knowing who and what is in a value/supply chain at a given time is essential to understand a product, process or service impact. We help you explore better, more circular options either with existing suppliers or with new ones.
The Circular Economy Development Center helps you navigate lifecycle assessment (LCAs), tools that measure environmental impacts, including greenhouse gas emissions, over the entire lifespan of products, processes, materials and any other measurable activities. LCAs are foundational in understanding the complex systemic interactions of industrial production, allowing for meaningful comparisons and improvements. We help you interpret the minutiae in decision-useful ways.
The Circular Economy Development Center can help you tell your LCA story in a public-facing, meaningful way with environmental product declarations (EPDs). EPDs include relevant material impacts like greenhouse gas emissions and the global warming potential of a product or material. EPDs are quickly becoming the norm in purchasing, and some entities, including the U.S. government’s General Services Administration (GSA), require them for compliance.
The Circular Economy Development Center has expertise in EHS compliance regulations and the application of these regulatory requirements to manufacturing and other operations. We perform a high-level assessment to identify and characterize potential EHS-related requirements, risks and risk factors, compliance strategies, etc., that can help spotlight which risks pose the greatest threat to your operations. We can also identify controls to help you reduce those risk levels.
The Circular Economy Development Center has expertise in business-case development for circular companies and products, sustainable organizations and ESG initiatives. Circularity, sustainability and ESG are important, yet business must create profit to survive. Fortunately, circular business and financial profitability go hand in hand. We shine the light to help you see the path.
Interested in Establishing or Expanding Your Own Circular Solution in Colorado?
We’re here to help! Click the link below and fill out a brief questionnaire. Our team will get in touch with you within 3 business days!
Circular Economy and Extended Producer Responsibility
Extended producer responsibility (EPR) plays a critical role in a circular economy—these concepts are connected.
Extended Producer Responsibility is defined as…
“An environmental policy approach in which a producer’s responsibility for a product is extended to the post-consumer stage of a product’s life cycle.”
The development of extended producer responsibility (EPR) encourages the development of circular business models by directly involving manufacturers in end-of-life solutions for the products they make.
Click here to learn more about EPR in the state of Colorado.
Who We Work With & How to Get Involved
Developing a more sustainable standard of business is a group effort—it takes all of us to create meaningful change. We’re committed to getting as many stakeholders involved as possible.
If you represent any of the following sectors, we would love to hear from you! All of these sectors (and more) play a pivotal role in helping create circular economies.
Recyclers
Manufacturers
Transporters
Rural Communities
Federal, State & Local Governments
Higher Education
Economic Development Programs
Funders and Investors
Convening can happen virtually, but the richest interactions are most often in person. Our vision for the CEDC is to branch out and work with partners and collaborators to create satellite work spaces to foster innovation, workshops, strategic planning, and community connection.
Take Part in Growing Colorado’s Circular Economies
Are you interested in establishing or expanding a circular solution in Colorado? Could your circular solution benefit from the CEDC’s expertise in project management and network building?
If so, CEDC staff would welcome the opportunity to learn more about your project. Click the link below to complete a short questionnaire. Within three business days, CEDC staff will touch base to discuss your project in more detail.
Target Markets
The Center will explore public-private partnerships to leverage the strength of both sectors and help provide economies of scale to expand a circular economy.
The goal of the CEDC is to expand three end markets that already exist in Colorado and create three new end markets in Colorado. Watch for more information as the CEDC pursues these goals
Our Staff
Laurie Johnson
Director
Laurie Johnson is the founder and CEO of Circular Colorado, a nonprofit working on waste diversion and end-market creation in Colorado. Prior to this, Laurie was the Chief Operating Officer for a local Colorado roll-off hauling company and served as the Executive Director for Recycle Colorado for three years. Outside of Colorado, Laurie served as VP of Client Services for Recyclebank, and she owned a retail product distribution business in Phoenix for eight years. She has served on multiple boards in Colorado including as a founding member of the Front Range Waste Diversion Board, now Colorado Circular Communities. Laurie holds a B.A. in Urban Affairs and an MBA in Sustainable Business.
Clio Goldsmith
Deputy Director
Margery Brown
Director of Strategy
Margery has over 25 years of experience in strategic planning, program development, financial planning, and operations management in various industries including federal and municipal government, economic development, real estate, and technology. Previously, she has served as the Chief Operating Officer at the Greater Phoenix Economic Council, the Executive Director of the Partnership for Economic Innovation, a senior advisor to the Commissioner for New York City’s Department of Citywide Administrative Services, a Deputy Commissioner for the City of New York’s Technology Department, and the Chief Operating Officer for the Americas at Cushman & Wakefield. Margery holds a B.A. in political science from the University of Chicago and a masters in public policy from the Eagleton Institute of Public Policy at Rutgers University.
Susan Renaud
Director of Special Projects
Susan has more than 20 years of experience in zero waste, circular economy, business sustainability, project management and design. Splitting her time between the public and private sectors, she worked for the City of Denver, City of Boulder and Boulder County in resource conservation roles where she developed circular pilot programs, managed Denver’s green business program and worked with stakeholders to translate sustainability goals to actionable plans. In the private sector, she worked for project management and design-build firms in New York, Arizona and Colorado. Susan holds bachelor’s degrees in Architecture and Spanish, a master’s in Urban and Regional Planning and a certificate in Business.
Amy Randell
Administrative Director
Amy has more than 19 years of experience working with the recycling industry. She worked for Recycle Colorado from 2005 to 2016, beginning as the membership coordinator and eventually serving as the interim executive director. Amy served on the Assistance Committee to the Pollution Prevention Advisory Board for seven years and still volunteers for Recycle Colorado. She has a bachelor’s degree in ecological restoration from Colorado State University.
Alicia Archibald
Satellite Office Coordinator
Alicia has been developing partnerships and assisting communities throughout Colorado for over 20 years. She has excelled in private and nonprofit business management, environmental education, and research and development of various sustainability strategies. Most of her career has centered around waste diversion, sustainable procurement, and recycling systems. Alicia has experience with commodities logistics, solid waste collection, transfer station management, as well as safety and personnel management. She enjoys working in a team setting and using systems thinking to create innovative solutions. Alicia is based in Colorado Springs where she has resided for over 30 years.
Mike Ritter
Satellite Office Coordinator
Mike brings his expertise as the Economic Development Director at the Grand Junction Business Incubator Center driven by a profound dedication to empowering entrepreneurs and fostering business growth. His prior role as the Workforce and Business Development Director at the Fruita Area Chamber of Commerce underscores his adeptness in shaping future workforce strategies. Holding a bachelor’s degree in communications with a Minor in Political Science from Colorado Mesa University. Originally hailing from Arvada, Colorado, Mike made the move to the western slope in 2017 to attend CMU.
Marianne Mate
Satellite Office Coordinator
Marianne moved from Boulder to Southwest Colorado in 1996 and jumped right in to volunteering with local government and nonprofits and co-founding the Montezuma Land Conservancy. As the Mayor of Dolores she formed and managed several stakeholder groups working with federal, state and local leaders to bring sustainable economic development, conservation and recreation projects to the community. Her professional career includes over 30 years of executive recruiting in the financial services industry and most recently in renewable energy as the owner of CleanTech Recruiting. She has served as a board member and chair of Four Corners Recycling Initiative and the San Juan Basin Recycling Association. She understands the challenges of recycling in rural areas and sees so much opportunity ahead for expanding the circular economy in Southwest Colorado. Marianne has a degree in Business and Resort Management from Colorado Mountain College.
Laura J. Davis
EHS Specialist
Laura is an innovative executive with extensive operational, program development, sustainability and compliance experience. She has worked in local government and various industry sectors and has served on several boards responsible for policy and standards development. Laura has been in senior leadership in the utility, aerospace, marijuana, and oil & gas sectors. She was appointed by four different governors to serve five terms on the Colorado State Board of Health, including four years as president. She also served on the Colorado Solid and Hazardous Waste Commission.
Funding
The Circular Economy Development Center was established by the Colorado state legislature via HB22-1159 to grow existing markets; create new markets; and provide necessary infrastructure, systems, logistics, and marketing to create a sustainable circular economy for recycled commodities in Colorado. The CEDC is funded through the Colorado Circular Communities (C3) Enterprise housed at the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment.
Satellite Offices
Colorado Springs
Coordinator: Alicia Archibald
Office Address (by appt only):
Sustainacenter
704 East Boulder Street
Colorado Springs, CO 80903
Grand Junction
Coordinator: Mike Ritter
Office Address:
Business Incubator Center
2591 Legacy Way
Grand Junction, CO 81503