[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"$fTERGepuVFaNISL7qA90fSk06UId7563Gw2vX4gWzxWo":3,"settings":86,"ECXX-ce":164,"$fZllLf_Y7KNBIXsqXfR53CyaSYwvB8wlgg1T8oQFzl-Y":192},{"id":4,"type":5,"cta":6,"cta_link":7,"created_at":8,"updated_at":9,"owner_id":10,"owner_relationship":11,"views":12,"owner":13,"contributors":29,"article_framework_elements":35,"article_industries":47,"article_locations":65,"involved_organisation":73,"collections":74,"image":17,"view_count":12,"contents":75,"canEdit":85},"ECXX","blog","Learn More","https://circle-economy.com","2024-02-26T15:19:10.000Z","2026-05-31T00:07:26.574Z","ce","no-affiliation",12,{"id":10,"type":14,"owner_id":15,"about":16,"job_title":17,"url":17,"linkedin":17,"email":17,"staff_of_id":17,"organisation_id":10,"organisation":18,"owner":20,"profile":23},"organisation","56NcOv","",null,{"id":10,"name":19,"link":7},"Circle Economy",{"id":15,"first_name":21,"last_name":22},"Circle","Economy",{"id":24,"link":25,"alt":26,"source":17,"created_at":27,"updated_at":28,"article_id":17,"image_profile_id":17,"banner_profile_id":10},"cmm374n1g0001sh01bspouxyc","https://kh-assets.prod.circularity-gap.world/org-profile-avatar/HiKR8W326OYvfBij.jpg","CE logo","2026-02-26T08:23:13.828Z","2026-04-28T13:00:19.131Z",[30],{"contributor_id":10,"contributor":31},{"id":10,"type":14,"owner_id":15,"about":16,"job_title":17,"url":17,"linkedin":17,"email":17,"staff_of_id":17,"organisation_id":10,"organisation":32,"owner":33,"profile":34},{"id":10,"name":19,"link":7},{"id":15,"first_name":21,"last_name":22},{"id":24,"link":25,"alt":26,"source":17,"created_at":27,"updated_at":28,"article_id":17,"image_profile_id":17,"banner_profile_id":10},[36],{"article_id":4,"framework_element_id":37,"created_at":38,"updated_at":39,"framework_element":40},"refuse","2026-04-28T12:52:22.993Z","2024-02-26T15:21:19.000Z",{"id":37,"name":41,"framework_id":42,"created_at":43,"updated_at":43,"framework":44},"Refuse","10R","2026-02-27T04:05:28.698Z",{"id":42,"name":45,"created_at":46,"updated_at":46},"10R Framework","2026-02-27T04:05:28.217Z",[48,54,60],{"article_id":4,"industry_id":49,"created_at":38,"updated_at":39,"industry":50},"retail",{"id":49,"name":51,"description":52,"sector":53},"Retail","Providing goods on the Internet, through mail order, or television, or providing goods in stores, including apparel, electronics, furniture, food and drug, etc.","goods_and_services",{"article_id":4,"industry_id":55,"created_at":38,"updated_at":39,"industry":56},"research_commercial_services",{"id":55,"name":57,"description":58,"sector":59},"Research & Commercial Services","Providing various support services for businesses and governments, such as research, testing, certification and consulting services, cleaning and maintenance services, security and protection services, legal, accounting and bookkeeping services, information management, data processing, and business process outsourcing services","professional_services",{"article_id":4,"industry_id":61,"created_at":38,"updated_at":39,"industry":62},"fashion_and_textiles",{"id":61,"name":63,"description":64,"sector":53},"Fashion and Textiles","Producing textile and leather products and processing them into apparel and accessories",[66],{"article_id":4,"location_id":67,"created_at":38,"updated_at":39,"location":68},"2759794",{"id":67,"type":69,"name":70,"color":17,"parent_location_id":71,"created_at":72,"updated_at":17},"city","Amsterdam","NLD","2026-02-27T07:55:14.722Z",[],[],[76],{"id":77,"score":78,"body":79,"status":84,"article_id":4,"created_at":38,"updated_at":39,"published_at":39},"cClQ",0,{"image":80,"title":81,"content":82,"summary":16,"attachment":83,"imageCaption":16},"https://kh-assets.prod.circularity-gap.world/main-image/1777380758530-78h6M9Jq.jpg","Circular fashion: brands can’t make the leap alone","\u003Cblockquote id=\"\">\u003Cem id=\"\">This article was first published by \u003C/em>\u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://fashionunited.com/news/business/circular-fashion-brands-can-t-make-the-leap-alone-according-to-new-circularity-gap-report/2024012558053\">\u003Cem id=\"\">Fashion United\u003C/em>\u003C/a>\u003Cem id=\"\">.\u003C/em>\u003C/blockquote>\u003Cp id=\"\">\u003Cem id=\"\">The Circularity Gap Report 2024\u003C/em> wastes no time in setting out its mission: after six years of measuring the state of global circularity, it’s time to shift from theory to action. This comes in response to the finding that despite the volume of debates, discussions and policies on the circular economy nearly tripling over the last five years, global circularity has fallen year on year—from 9.1% in 2018 to 7.2% in 2023.&nbsp;\u003C/p>\u003Cp id=\"\">With overhauls to policy, finance and the labour market posited as key levers for change, the report lays out key actions for governments and financial institutions across key world sectors, from manufactured goods to construction and mobility.\u003C/p>\u003Ch3 id=\"\">Reforming fast fashion can catalyse a circular manufacturing sector\u003C/h3>\u003Cp id=\"\">Manufacturing is at the core of the global economy; we need it to fashion the clothes on our backs, produce the cars we drive and make the appliances we use day-to-day. Its environmental impact, however, is far from negligible—the fashion industry alone is the world’s \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://www.theecoexperts.co.uk/blog/top-7-most-polluting-industries\">6th most polluting\u003C/a>, accounting for \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://www.mckinsey.com/~/media/mckinsey/industries/retail/our%20insights/fashion%20on%20climate/fashion-on-climate-full-report.pdf\">4% of global emissions\u003C/a>, with the average EU citizen’s textile consumption racking up a carbon footprint of around \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://www.eea.europa.eu/en/about/contact-us/faqs/what-are-the-environmental-impacts-of-textiles\">270 kilogrammes\u003C/a> in 2020. With fast fashion—and even luxury brands—becoming increasingly trend-driven, production and consumption are spiralling: the number of garments purchased per person \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://www.mckinsey.com/featured-insights/mckinsey-explainers/what-is-fast-fashion\">increased by 60%\u003C/a> between 2000 and 2014, for example.&nbsp;\u003C/p>\u003Cp id=\"\">On the whole, we’re stuck in a distinctly linear cycle of buying, wearing and replacing garments. Now, studies show that consumers \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://drive.google.com/file/d/1NjKeeBVUY_Ap4pY5K-4cmsPOud27Dr06/view\">largely toss cast-off clothing\u003C/a> because they’re bored of it or feel it no longer suits them: items simply being worn out is only a factor in around one-third of cases. And despite growing environmental concerns, the fast fashion industry’s hold on the global market is set to expand, with estimates suggesting that it could reach a value of \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://www.statista.com/statistics/1008241/fast-fashion-market-value-forecast-worldwide/\">US$185 billion by 2027\u003C/a>—a sizable jump from US$106 billion in 2022.&nbsp;\u003C/p>\u003Cp id=\"\">The \u003Cem id=\"\">Circularity Gap Report 2024\u003C/em> imagines a different future for fashion: one where flimsy, trend-driven garments are replaced by durable, easy-to-mend and recyclable clothing, and businesses commonly offer affordable services like repair, rental and second-hand sales, with take-back schemes making it easy to give clothing items a second life. This future also sees a new consumer ethos: people swap, share and upcycle their clothing through community-led initiatives that make living a ‘circular’ lifestyle as convenient as possible. Donation bins are used as a last resort, and clothes are never thrown into general rubbish containers.\u003C/p>\u003Cfigure id=\"\" class=\"w-richtext-figure-type-image w-richtext-align-fullwidth\" style=\"max-width:1600px\" data-rt-type=\"image\" data-rt-align=\"fullwidth\" data-rt-max-width=\"1600px\">\u003Cdiv id=\"\">\u003Cimg id=\"\" alt=\"\" src=\"https://uploads-ssl.webflow.com/5d26d80e8836af2d12ed1269/65dcaac504882a25bc9ea787_8xKEQfSnjHugjxFmesB8ND5dO2vP8krBZAllyU3YPJa5Jt0f1o7T2yLBhHyhPHbQpNil4xJ9zIcUR9RuwkOwGAWRHOHBzSzLWCdo6CAs_Rba40Bx9VABzg6HPF8Kv08kV6vrbVtZs76KWNYxCTjqSpc.jpeg\" width=\"auto\" height=\"auto\" loading=\"auto\">\u003C/div>\u003Cfigcaption id=\"\">\u003Cem id=\"\">In a circular future, repair is commonplace. Photo by\u003C/em>\u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://unsplash.com/@flaxeco?utm_content=creditCopyText&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=unsplash\">\u003Cem id=\"\"> Volha Flaxeco\u003C/em>\u003C/a>\u003Cem id=\"\"> on\u003C/em>\u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://unsplash.com/photos/person-sewing-green-textile-using-white-electric-sewing-machine-omgRZCmTvUM?utm_content=creditCopyText&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=unsplash\">\u003Cem id=\"\"> Unsplash\u003C/em>\u003C/a>\u003C/figcaption>\u003C/figure>\u003Cp id=\"\">‍\u003C/p>\u003Cp id=\"\">This may sound utopian to many. But while we have a way to go, initiatives of this ilk are already cropping up worldwide: from Patagonia’s famed \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://wornwear.patagonia.com/\">‘Worn Wear’\u003C/a> programme to the City of Amsterdam’s \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://cosh.eco/en/brands/kleermakers-aangesloten-bij-stadspas-amsterdam#:~:text=The%20City%20of%20Amsterdam%20has,repair%20shops%20across%20the%20city.\">40% discount\u003C/a> on clothing repairs for lower-income residents. Brands are increasingly championing sustainable materials and processes, although greenwashing still runs rampant. What’s more, the technology needed for a circular industry—think fibre-to-fibre recycling, for example—is ready to go. In the end, however, real progress is muddied by an inability to scale: going circular in a linear world is next to impossible, and without the necessary logistics, infrastructure and mindset firmly entrenched across disparate factions—from policymakers and financiers to consumers—the transition can’t happen at the speed needed to meaningfully address ecological breakdown. A surge in investment from key industry players and stricter regulatory support are needed, or one-off efforts from brands may take place in a vacuum and fail to set the bar for those falling short.&nbsp;&nbsp;\u003C/p>\u003Ch3 id=\"\">High-income countries must scale down overproduction and consumption\u003C/h3>\u003Cp id=\"\">So where do we start? It’s time to ‘walk the talk’, the report urges: we need to see concerted action from governments and financial institutions if a circular fashion industry is to progress beyond the realm of ‘utopian’. Higher-income countries face a unique set of challenges along this path. Their residents are high consumers: the average American, for example, purchases \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-high-price-of-fast-fashion-11567096637\">68 new clothing items a year\u003C/a>, while Europeans purchased an average of \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://www.statista.com/topics/11723/apparel-shopping-behavior-in-europe/#:~:text=On%20average%2C%20European%20consumers%20were,compared%20to%20the%20previous%20year.\">42 new garments\u003C/a> per person in 2023. What’s more, these goods are largely produced elsewhere, offshoring impacts such as severe pollution from the use of hazardous chemicals. Lower-income countries often bear the brunt of the end-of-life stage, too: millions of tonnes of cast-off clothing are shipped around the world yearly, ending up in markets for resale, or as waste in the informal landfills or shores of less affluent countries, largely in Africa (46%) and Asia (41%).&nbsp;\u003C/p>\u003Cp id=\"\">With this in mind, shifting consumer perspectives and setting new standards for sustainable production can’t come from brands alone. Radical collaboration is needed across public and private sectors. To this end, the report recommends:\u003C/p>\u003Cp id=\"\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">Strengthening Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) schemes. \u003C/strong>These aim to shift the burden of responsibility for old or worn-out products upstream, incentivising producers to design lasting, easy-to-recycle products. Although EPRs are gaining popularity—the \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://www.government.nl/documents/publications/2023/05/01/infographic-extended-producer-responsibility-for-textiles\">Netherlands rolled out a scheme\u003C/a> for textiles mid-2023, for example—current iterations are failing to meaningfully extend product lifetimes or put a dent in proliferating textile waste. There’s a chance to do better: by tweaking current regulations, legislators can ensure EPRs’ full potential is reached. \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://fashionunited.uk/news/fashion/extended-producer-responsibility-isn-t-enough-to-tackle-global-fashion-waste-mountain-here-s-why/2023050269308\">This could mean\u003C/a> explicitly centring schemes on the reduction of textile consumption and lifecycle expansion, rolling out stricter sorting criteria and international trade regulations to prevent waste colonialism and using funds collected through the EPR to scale fibre-to-fibre recycling and fibre-based sorting infrastructure.&nbsp;\u003C/p>\u003Cfigure id=\"\" class=\"w-richtext-figure-type-image w-richtext-align-fullwidth\" style=\"max-width:1600px\" data-rt-type=\"image\" data-rt-align=\"fullwidth\" data-rt-max-width=\"1600px\">\u003Cdiv id=\"\">\u003Cimg id=\"\" alt=\"\" src=\"https://uploads-ssl.webflow.com/5d26d80e8836af2d12ed1269/65dcaac501e41105827ce369_Fr8fshwbGDniLoFKZMUBtq_l7nQuRHGolZCew6tr_K0CWi7VqA_dB-1m9iOF73mooQzXgiBvjbmDLeET0RuwBVUwADoFfnXS_YuEohvBg8O1wnu0_DqaAcbOgpwRyjAB3OlP2pm71IVzp81eOyYutto.jpeg\" width=\"auto\" height=\"auto\" loading=\"auto\">\u003C/div>\u003Cfigcaption id=\"\">\u003Cem id=\"\">Current EPR schemes aren’t meaningfully reducing textile waste. Photo by\u003C/em>\u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://unsplash.com/@flenguyen?utm_content=creditCopyText&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=unsplash\">\u003Cem id=\"\"> Francois Le Nguyen\u003C/em>\u003C/a>\u003Cem id=\"\"> on\u003C/em>\u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://unsplash.com/photos/garbage-on-the-street-during-daytime-pouTfHUG430?utm_content=creditCopyText&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=unsplash\">\u003Cem id=\"\"> Unsplash\u003C/em>\u003C/a>\u003C/figcaption>\u003C/figure>\u003Cp id=\"\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">\u003Cbr>Banning the destruction of unsold goods. \u003C/strong>Fashion’s dirty little (not-so) secret: the destruction of unsold items. From luxury labels like Burberry and Coach to fast fashion giants like H&amp;M and Urban Outfitters, the burning, shredding and landfilling of brand-new garments is all too common. Cheaper and easier than recycling, companies destroy their own leftover stock in an attempt to protect brand value—or simply because they’ve produced too much to sell or store. The \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://www.dw.com/en/eu-approves-ban-on-destruction-of-unsold-clothing/a-67641000\">EU cracked down\u003C/a> on this practice at the tail end of 2023, with a ban set to go into effect for big businesses by 2025. While this is a step in the right direction, there are still some kinks to iron out: ensuring, namely, that the alternative to destruction isn’t mere downcycling (into insulation, for example) or shipping off excess stock to be dealt with in other corners of the world.&nbsp;\u003C/p>\u003Cp id=\"\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">Banning the advertising of high-impact goods—including fast fashion. \u003C/strong>An ad-free world seems unthinkable: we’re bombarded with images, from models and makeup to fast food and electronics, nearly everywhere we go. The original ad ban—rolled out for cigarettes several decades ago—has had promising results, sparking a broader discussion about banning ads for products like junk food and alcohol. As of yet, talk on bans for fast fashion advertising is minimal, aside from \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://fashionunited.uk/news/fashion/researchers-from-amsterdam-institutions-recommend-banning-fast-fashion-advertising/2023102772288\">recommendations\u003C/a> from the University of Amsterdam and the Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences to the Dutch government on the matter. While so-called ‘fossil advertising’ may encounter hurdles—with the legality of these measures recently called into question—wealthier nations may explore how ad bans can be equitably rolled out to reshape their residents’ consumption behaviour.\u003C/p>\u003Cp id=\"\">‍\u003C/p>\u003Cfigure id=\"\" class=\"w-richtext-figure-type-image w-richtext-align-fullwidth\" style=\"max-width:1600px\" data-rt-type=\"image\" data-rt-align=\"fullwidth\" data-rt-max-width=\"1600px\">\u003Cdiv id=\"\">\u003Cimg id=\"\" alt=\"\" src=\"https://uploads-ssl.webflow.com/5d26d80e8836af2d12ed1269/65dcaac59776119501e5fda9_ZtFHaVCA2lmiHja7XnXvB19wgewkgKxj_r_0DBlnS1YqOS9VMlaXuLx0iLyP7kpsiNfcP8H5eDq6QCvucSIWw5Hk5TIYvGBSzkKFBHHNX0ta6e5F5HJTvGS3O6y8HMhD_IBuFC_hfWNtX9uEzplBMrw.jpeg\" width=\"auto\" height=\"auto\" loading=\"auto\">\u003C/div>\u003Cfigcaption id=\"\">\u003Cem id=\"\">Advertising is ubiquitous—but in a circular future, this may not be the case. Photo by\u003C/em>\u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://unsplash.com/@brooksieg?utm_content=creditCopyText&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=unsplash\">\u003Cem id=\"\"> Geoff Brooks\u003C/em>\u003C/a>\u003Cem id=\"\"> on\u003C/em>\u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://unsplash.com/photos/cars-on-road-a94IcGkbRws?utm_content=creditCopyText&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=unsplash\">\u003Cem id=\"\"> Unsplash\u003C/em>\u003C/a>\u003C/figcaption>\u003C/figure>\u003Cp id=\"\">‍\u003C/p>\u003Cp id=\"\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">Requiring an environmental ‘score’ label for garments. \u003C/strong>Environmental labelling isn’t new—but current schemes are highly fragmented, with countless certifications and labels in Europe alone. The EU’s ‘Ecolabel’ programme—an early attempt to harmonise these—does cover clothing and textiles, but only denotes products that have met their criteria: garments that aren’t up to par aren’t publicly marked as such. Governments could explore a harmonised way to ‘grade’ clothing items—similar to the five-colour Nutri-Score scheme for food—that could allow consumers to easily compare options and make more informed choices.\u003C/p>\u003Cp id=\"\">\u003Cstrong id=\"\">Encouraging consumers to change their habits through financial incentives. \u003C/strong>Old habits die hard—and for many, chucking a holey old garment in the bin seems far more convenient than seeking out repair services or picking up a darning needle. Providing bonus cheques or slashing taxes on repair services could nudge consumers in the right direction, an initiative already cropping up in Europe: Sweden, for example, has \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://orbitax.com/news/archive.php/Sweden-Publishes-Laws-to-Imple-49914\">cut VAT rates for repair\u003C/a>, while France has \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-66174349\">launched a bonus scheme\u003C/a> offering discounts of up to €25 per repair.&nbsp;\u003C/p>\u003Ch3 id=\"\">It’s time to return to a simpler life, the report urges\u003C/h3>\u003Cp id=\"\">This year’s \u003Cem id=\"\">Circularity Gap Report\u003C/em> sets a high standard for the world, but it’s nothing if not encouraging. Ultimately, it’s time to be bold and rethink the rules of the game—and a shift in perspective is needed from everyone, from consumers and companies to policymakers and financiers.\u003C/p>\u003Cp id=\"\">The report’s vision for the future can be summed up by the pithy ‘consuming less but cherishing more’, which will see the rise of lifestyles marked by quality and connection over quantity and consumption. Even if the high-level statistics suggest otherwise, there seems to be a growing desire for such a life: swathes of people are trading the glitz and glamour of city life for rural settings, with seemingly old-fashioned activities like growing and preserving food and making and mending clothes on the rise.&nbsp;\u003C/p>\u003Cp id=\"\">Only time will tell if—in the looming face of climate breakdown—this can turn from trend to touchstone.&nbsp;\u003C/p>\u003Ch1 id=\"\">—\u003C/h1>\u003Cp id=\"\">\u003Cem id=\"\">Learn more\u003C/em>\u003C/p>\u003Cp id=\"\">Circle Economy Foundation’s ‘report card’ for the global economy launches yearly in January. Learn more about how policy, finance and labour can accelerate the transition to a circular economy in the \u003Ca id=\"\" href=\"https://www.circularity-gap.world/2024\">\u003Cem id=\"\">Circularity Gap Report 2024\u003C/em>\u003C/a>\u003Cem id=\"\">.\u003C/em>\u003C/p>",[],"published",false,{"data":87,"meta":163},{"id":88,"documentId":89,"createdAt":90,"updatedAt":91,"publishedAt":92,"nav_secondary":93,"nav_primary":94},74,"cq0rcn2xoi5no1yfyvbgyln1","2025-06-22T14:25:01.818Z","2026-05-26T16:26:38.254Z","2026-05-26T16:26:38.726Z",[],[95,100,128,133,138,158],{"id":96,"label":97,"url":98,"disable_label_url":17,"children_links":99},699,"About","/about",[],{"id":101,"label":102,"url":103,"disable_label_url":17,"children_links":104},703,"Focus areas","programmes",[105,108,112,116,120,124],{"id":106,"label":102,"url":107},1651,"/programmes",{"id":109,"label":110,"url":111},1652,"Cities & regions","/programmes/cities",{"id":113,"label":114,"url":115},1653,"Finance & economics","/programmes/finance",{"id":117,"label":118,"url":119},1654,"Textiles & fashion","/programmes/textiles",{"id":121,"label":122,"url":123},1655,"Jobs & employment","/programmes/jobs",{"id":125,"label":126,"url":127},1656,"Global value chains","/programmes/value-chains",{"id":129,"label":130,"url":131,"disable_label_url":17,"children_links":132},700,"Services","/services",[],{"id":134,"label":135,"url":136,"disable_label_url":17,"children_links":137},701,"Impact","/impact",[],{"id":139,"label":140,"url":141,"disable_label_url":17,"children_links":142},704,"CGR","/cgr",[143,146,150,154],{"id":144,"label":145,"url":141},1657,"About CGR",{"id":147,"label":148,"url":149},1658,"CGR Global","/cgr/cgr-global",{"id":151,"label":152,"url":153},1659,"CGR Nations","/cgr/cgr-national",{"id":155,"label":156,"url":157},1660,"CGR Regions & cities","/cgr/cgr-regions-cities",{"id":159,"label":160,"url":161,"disable_label_url":17,"children_links":162},702,"Resources","/knowledge-hub/search",[],{},[165,171,176,182,187],{"id":166,"title":167,"type":5,"image":168,"isCE":169,"edit":85,"date":170},"tmb2","How circular lighting is delivering real-world impact\n","https://kh-assets.prod.circularity-gap.world/main-image/wOf3ePYLd-ai-nTe.jpg",true,"2026-05-26T13:33:16.876Z",{"id":172,"title":173,"type":5,"image":174,"isCE":169,"edit":85,"date":175},"bKZM"," Why economic growth hides a massive loss of value","https://kh-assets.prod.circularity-gap.world/main-image/PAZpy33DFUnu55sI.jpg","2026-05-26T13:14:50.950Z",{"id":177,"title":178,"type":179,"image":180,"isCE":169,"edit":85,"date":181},"Q7yK","CircularInvest Policy Brief #1","report","https://kh-assets.prod.circularity-gap.world/main-image/Y3prkjyBi5uqvANo.jpg","2026-05-20T11:58:34.471Z",{"id":183,"title":184,"type":179,"image":185,"isCE":169,"edit":85,"date":186},"SpfD","SOLSTICE: Prospective Environmental Impact Modules","https://kh-assets.prod.circularity-gap.world/main-image/oBOl_9TzIu69neBq.jpg","2026-05-26T11:18:55.316Z",{"id":188,"title":189,"type":179,"image":190,"isCE":169,"edit":85,"date":191},"N_S7","Investment-Readiness in the Circular Economy: A Step-by-Step Guide for Project Owners","https://kh-assets.prod.circularity-gap.world/main-image/sX16SmuAhEkZkT5h.jpg","2026-05-20T11:54:00.388Z",{"likeCount":78,"isLiked":85}]