A regenerative economy is an economic system that aims to restore, rejuvenate, and regenerate environmental, social, and human capital rather than simply minimising harm (as in traditional sustainability). Instead of focusing solely on growth and profit, it prioritises resilience, equity, and environmental health.
The core principles of a regenerative economy include:
Living Systems Thinking:
This approach acknowledges that economies are a component of natural cycles and must coexist with them.
Regeneration over Extraction:
This approach places more emphasis on reviving ecosystems, biodiversity, soil health, and water systems than it does on destroying them.
Circularity:
Reduces waste by using cradle-to-cradle product design, recycling, and reuse.
Equity and Justice:
This guarantees that opportunities and resources are distributed fairly throughout communities.
Resilience:
Creates economies that can adjust to shocks (pandemics, market fluctuations, and climate change).
Community Wealth Building:
Promotes grassroots involvement, cooperative models, and local ownership.
Integrating Indigenous Knowledge:
This approach promotes sustainable resource management by valuing traditional ecological expertise.
Examples of regenerative practices:
Agriculture:
Soil carbon sequestration, agroforestry, permaculture, and regenerative farming.
Energy:
Making the switch to decentralized renewable energy sources (biogas, wind, and solar).
Finance:
Carbon credit schemes, community banks, and impact investing.
Business:
Organizations that invest in ecosystem restoration and create closed-loop products.
Urban planning:
Green communities with circular waste systems, effective transportation, and infrastructure rooted in nature.
Why It Is Important to the World:
Restores damaged farmlands, boosting the availability of food.
Generates green jobs in sustainable agriculture, ecotourism, and renewable energy.
Enhances resistance to climate shocks, floods, and droughts.
Corresponds with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) of the UN and Agenda 2063, particularly SDGs 12 (responsible consumption), 13 (climate action), and 15 (life on land).
To put it briefly, a regenerative economy aims to "leave things better than we found them" rather than just "do less harm."