The main objectives of NextGen were to develop and demonstrate novel technological, business and governance solutions for water in the circular economy (CE) in ten high-profile, large-scale, demonstration cases across Europe, and to develop the necessary approaches, tools and partnerships, to transfer and upscale. The CE transition driven by NextGen encompasses a wide range of water-embedded resources: water itself, energy, and materials (e.g. nutrients). We successfully demonstrated circular water solutions at our demo cases, and we revealed the conditions for uptake. Hence, NextGen challenged embedded thinking and practices in the water sector by embracing circular economy principles and technological innovation.
Our key messages:
1. NextGen unlocked the potential of the circular economy in the water sector, by demonstrating recovery and reuse of water-embedded resources in ten demo cases spread across different European regions in eight countries
2. NextGen demonstrated the benefits of circular water solutions in reducing water, energy and materials consumption, in preventing pollution to water ecosystems and the environment, and in providing added value of recovered resources to be used in other sectors to implement symbiotic approaches of the circular economy
3. NextGen provided evidence-based knowledge on enabling framework conditions for the transition to a circular economy in the water sector, including societal acceptability, circular value chains and business models, and supportive policy and regulations
4. NextGen has launched a Water Europe online match-making marketplace for products and services, that showcases circular water technologies, environmental and economic assessment tools, and best practices to implement circular economy solutions
5. NextGen informed relevant policy, suggesting that there is a clear need for better aligned EU directives that incentivise circularity, improve clarity and transparency for the implementation of the Water Reuse Regulation, and highlighted the need for dedicated end-of-waste criteria that simplify the process of less costly routes to market for recovered resources.