Sustainable Business

SB March 2013

Sustainable Business magazine - essential reading for sustainability professionals

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Technology 3/4 gested as reducing the need for long-distance transport with associated costs and carbon emissions. 3D printers have also been cited as potentially extending the product life cycle because of their ability to repair and print replacement parts (with recycled materials) and upcycle old products into transformed ones. Finally, some advocates argue that 3D printers could help reduce global economic imbalances as developing countries could, for example, print their own medical prosthetics, energy generation equipment etc far more economically. Other 3D printing experts, such as Timothy Gutowski, Professor of Mechanical Engineering, at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), is less convinced, however. "While there are some interesting applications, there is a lack of strong evidence or research that suggests that 3D printing is going to lead to a more widespread sustainable society, in fact in some cases, it may have the opposite effect," he says. Gutowski supports this with an example: "It is very easy to combine mixtures and customise 3D products but it becomes much more difficult to break up such a product for recycling purposes". Likewise, one may create another waste problem if everybody starts printing out 3D objects without thinking it through. Felix Preston, research fellow at Chatham House, adds further to the debate: "Given the range of possible materials, printing methods and applications, there is no guarantee that [3D printing] will lead to greener production and

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