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Design for the Environment (DfE)

1992
  • United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Environmental engineers collaborating on ecodesign in a modern office.

Design for the Environment (DfE), also known as Ökodesign, is a proactive approach to product and process development that minimizes environmental and human health impacts across the entire product Lebenszyklus. It integrates environmental considerations into the earliest design stages, alongside traditional factors like cost and performance, to prevent pollution and conserve resources from the outset.

DfE emerged from the realization that end-of-pipe pollution controls were inefficient and costly. Instead of treating waste after its creation, DfE focuses on prevention by making smarter choices during design. This holistic approach employs life-cycle thinking, evaluating everything from raw material extraction (‘cradle’) to manufacturing, use, and final disposal (‘grave’). Key principles include selecting low-impact, non-toxic, and recycled materials; minimizing overall material and energy usage during production and operation; and designing for longevity, repairability, and disassembly. By considering a product’s end-of-life at its beginning, DfE facilitates recycling, remanufacturing, and safe decomposition, forming a cornerstone of the Kreislaufwirtschaft. The novelty of DfE was its fundamental shift from a reactive to a proactive and systemic view of environmental protection within industry, embedding sustainability as a core criterion of innovation and quality, rather than an afterthought or a regulatory burden. It transformed environmental management from a compliance issue into a strategic business opportunity.

UNESCO Nomenclature: 3308
– Environmental Engineering

Typ

Abstract System

Disruption

Substantial

Verwendung

Widespread Use

Precursors

  • the environmental movement of the 1960s and 1970s
  • the concept of pollution prevention (p2)
  • früh Lebenszyklusbewertung (lca) methodologies
  • the ‘limits to growth’ report (1972)
  • the brundtland report ‘our common future’ (1987) defining sustainable development

Anwendungen

  • epa safer choice label
  • epeat (electronic product environmental assessment tool)
  • von der Wiege bis zur Wiege certification
  • circular economy business models
  • sustainable supply chain management

Patente:

DAS

Potential Innovations Ideas

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Related to: design for the environment, DfE, ecodesign, sustainable design, life cycle assessment, green design, circular economy, pollution prevention, product stewardship, industrial Ökologie.

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Historical Context

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