We then prioritised these opportunities according to their economic and environmental potential, those that best align with Thailand’s ambitions, and their ‘fit’ with target sectors. We prioritised those which impacted the full value chain most. We also evaluated measures at an individual business level to ensure the benefits and actions were meaningful to business owners and government decision-makers.
Our recommendations focused on five opportunities for each strategic sector, which could realise benefits of US$23.1bn, or four per cent of Thailand’s projected GDP, by 2026.
Overcoming the barriers to circularity
Successfully moving to a circular model requires systemic change for Thailand’s economy. With such a broad reaching approach, thinking about individual sectors in silos serves no purpose. Instead, we examined the different factors which limit the development of a circular economy by sector and across sectors.
We found there was a lack of knowledge and understanding of the concept across public and private sectors and academia. This makes it challenging for governments, investors and the private sector to unify their ambitions. There was also a lack of clarity around the business case for a circular economy.
Developing a circular economy makes great sense environmentally, but articulating the business model that underpins private sector growth is key to educating the many multinationals and banks yet to significantly invest in the concept. Any circular economy is constrained by the physical and digital infrastructure available, and developing these is essential to delivering the opportunities it promises both practically and for business.
Our analysis identified the key activities and collaboration required to overcome these barriers and realise the substantial gains on offer. Our recommended actions ranged from revising regulations and standards to incorporating a circular economic approach in public procurement.