Executive Summary
Preface and Acknowledgements
1. Introduction
1.1. Applied Common Sense and Whole Systems Thinking2. Foundations
1.2. Defining Eco-Industrial Parks
1.3. EIP Benefits and Risks
1.4. The EIP: A Menu of Opportunities
1.5. A Brief History
1.6. Why Developing an EIP is an Inquiry Process
2.1. Cleaner Production and Industrial Ecology3. EIPs and the Local Community
2.2. Sustainable Architecture, Construction, and Planning
2.3. New Organizational Relationships
3.1. Public Private Partnership4. Planning and Development of Eco-Industrial Parks
3.2. Building the Context for an EIP
3.3. Building Your Local Vision
3.4. Closer Integration of Industrial Parks and the CommunityA Partnership Between an Eco-Park and the Community for Greenhouse Gas Reductions
4.1. Ownership Public or Private?5. Financing Eco-Industrial Parks
4.2. Site selection process
4.3. Predevelopment and feasibility studies
4.4. EIP Marketing Analysis and Recruitment Strategy
4.5. Project Organization
4.6. Environmental Standards in Development
5.1. Introduction6. The Emerging Sustainable Economy and EIP Recruitment Themes
5.2. Levels of EIP Financing
5.3. Basic steps in forming Public Private Partnerships (PPP)
5.4. The Community Capital Investment Initiative
5.5. Partnership Between the Developer and the Tenants
5.6. An Investment Fund
5.7. An Action Foundation
5.8. Positioning Your EIP for Investment
5.9. Reducing the Risks
5.10. Funding Dedicated to Sustainable Development
5.11. Resources for Financing
6.1. Toward a Sustainable Economy7. Eco-Industrial Policy
Increased efficiency and use of renewable energy and material resources
Ecologically-aware design of communities and the built environment
Sustaining and renewing natural systems
Redesign of public and private sector organizations6.2. EIP Recruitment Themes
Agro-Industrial Parks
Resource Recovery Parks
Renewable Energy Industrial Parks
Petrochemical Parks
Power Plant Parks
7.1. Introduction8. Design Strategies for Eco-Industrial Parks
7.2. Integration of Policy and Policy Organizations
7.3. Place-Based Policy
7.4. Resource-Based Policy
7.5. Incentives
7.6. Research Partnerships
7.7. Umbrella Permitting and Programmatic EIA
7.8. Energy Policy
7.9. Anti-Corruption Policy
8.1. EIP Design Processes and Tools9. Construction and Implementation
8.2. Site Assessment and Planning
8.3. Design of Physical Infrastructure
8.4. Industrial Facility Design
8.5. Building Design
8.6 Sustainable Design in Asia
9.1. Construction Process10. Management of Eco-Industrial Parks
9.2. Implementation of Economic and Social Programs
9.3. Redesign for Error-correction
10.1. There Are Two Management Interests in an EIP11. Greening Existing Industrial Parks
10.2. The Functions of EIP Management
10.3. Key Management Issues
10.4. The Operations Room
10.5. Shared Support Services
10.6 Environmental Management Systems
11.1. Working with Existing Industrial Parks and Their Tenants12. Creating By-Product Exchanges
11.2. Guidelines for Self-assessment Audit of Industrial Parks
11.3. Models for Cleaner Production Centers
11.4. Eco-Industrial Networks
11.5. Checklist of Other Handbook Sections Useful for Existing Parks
12.1. Implications for Industrial Park Development13. Appendix
12.2. BPX Across Multiple Sites or in a Region
12.3. The Self-Organizing Model
12.4. The By-Product Utility
13.1. Project Profiles
13.2 Supplementary Information