Jackson Cionek
24 Views

Regional Zero Waste Intermunicipal consortia and State-level circular economy

Regional Zero Waste
Intermunicipal consortia and State-level circular economy


First-Person Consciousness — Brain Bee

“When the garbage truck passes, what exactly is it taking away from me?”

I was a single egg cell before I ever paid property tax.

At the beginning, I was only metabolism: nutrients in, residues out, everything recycled by my mother’s body. There was no “trash”. There was flow — whatever my body did not use became input for another system.

In early childhood, my consciousness grew out of Body-Territory:
the smell of trash piling up on the corner, the truck that came only to certain neighbourhoods, the stream that sometimes ran clear, sometimes carried plastic bags, old furniture, leftovers of everything. I had no idea what “waste management” was, but my body already felt that the city’s metabolism was sick.

Today, as a digital adolescent, I see two narratives fighting inside me:

  • on one side, my feed talking about “zero waste”, “circular economy”, “creative recycling”;

  • on the other, data showing that a large share of urban waste in Brazil still ends up in dumps or poorly managed landfills, with serious social and environmental impacts.

Between one “environmental awareness” campaign and another, the truck keeps driving down the same street, with the same route and the same logic: take the problem out of my sight, even if that just pushes it to another periphery, another municipality, another body.

That’s when I understood:
as long as waste is treated municipality by municipality, the disease remains regional.
And as long as the circular economy is treated as a “business trend”, and not as a State decision, we’re only changing the name of the problem.

From this perception comes my proposal for Regional Zero Waste:
using intermunicipal consortia as the concrete architecture of a State JIWASA capable of planning the material metabolism of an entire territory — not just “managing the garbage” at its own curb.


1. From waste to regional material metabolism

When I speak of Regional Zero Waste, I am not imagining a future with absolutely no residues, but a system in which everything that leaves one organism enters as input in another.

Recent literature on circular economy and solid waste management in Brazil shows exactly this:

  • urban waste is one of the main practical entry points for circularity policies;

  • the biggest bottlenecks are not only technological, but governance-related: scale and coordination across municipalities.

At the same time, studies on circular cities in Brazil show that:

  • official waste statistics still record high levels of inadequate disposal;

  • cities that move faster toward circularity usually combine regional planning, inclusion of waste pickers, and economic instruments to reorganize material flows.

In other words: there is no circular city surrounded by a linear region.
The metabolism is regional — and the law has to learn to think that way.


2. Why a single municipality can’t handle it alone

Brazil’s National Policy on Solid Waste (PNRS) — Law 12.305/2010, regulated by Decree 10.936/2022 — already points to regional integration, reverse logistics and shared responsibility among the federal government, states, municipalities, private sector and citizens.

But in practice, PNRS stumbles on three obstacles:

  1. Minimum scale
    Many small municipalities lack the waste volume and budget to run sanitary landfills, sorting centres and treatment plants that are technically and economically viable.

  2. Technical capacity
    Without qualified staff, mayors tend to hire “turn-key solutions” — often expensive, opaque and disconnected from circular-economy logic.

  3. Political fragmentation
    Every administration changes contracts, priorities and discourse, dismantling any vision of long-term metabolism.

This is where intermunicipal consortia enter as a form of institutional Yãy Hã Miy:
a way to collectively imitate and scale good practices, where municipalities learn together and share risks, technology and decision-making until they reach regional high performance.

Recent research shows, for example, that:

  • the state of São Paulo already has several waste consortia (such as CIRSOP and Consimares), joining municipalities around shared infrastructure and planning;

  • national surveys identify dozens of public consortia working in sanitation and waste, pointing to the consortia model as key for the technical and financial feasibility of the PNRS.

In short, practice is already showing theory the path: the way forward is regional.


3. Circular economy of the State, not just of companies

In recent years, reports and papers have pointed to a clear trend:

  • Brazil is trying to bring its waste management closer to European-style circular economy, with emphasis on prevention, recycling and extended producer responsibility;

  • case studies (such as the Federal District or cities like Salvador) show that waste policies can become a central vector of urban transition, if they are integrated with land-use planning, transport and social inclusion.

But circular economy cannot be just:

  • a certification,

  • a green seal on packaging,

  • a marketing campaign.

To become a State-level circular economy, it needs to:

  1. Be written into regional laws, multi-year plans and consortia contracts;

  2. Articulate economic incentives, such as circular public procurement, tariffs that reward reduction and reuse, and credit lines for repair, remanufacturing and reuse;

  3. Include waste pickers, cooperatives and informal workers at the metabolic core of the system, not as disposable labour.

The question is not only “how can companies be more circular?”, but:
how does the State structure the playing field so that circularity becomes the rule, not the exception?


4. Zero Waste Consortia as JIWASA architecture

When I talk about Regional Zero Waste, I imagine intermunicipal consortia functioning like a collective prefrontal cortex of the territory:

  • planning routes, treatment types, reduction targets and indicators of environmental and public-health outcomes;

  • negotiating, as a block, with recycling companies, reverse-logistics systems and innovation hubs;

  • creating shared infrastructure (regional sanitary landfills, sorting centres, composting plants, reuse hubs) with enough scale to be efficient.

A Zero Waste Consortium, in a JIWASA logic, should:

  1. Work with metabolic targets, not only tonnage

    • for example: % of organic waste returning to the soil as compost;

    • % of packaging recovered via reverse logistics;

    • reduction in disease linked to poor waste management.

  2. Guarantee citizen participation in regional councils

    • residents, waste pickers, local businesses, universities and environmental groups deciding together how the material metabolism of the region is designed.

  3. Integrate data

    • regional digital platforms to monitor waste flows, costs, health indicators and climate impacts.

  4. Connect with DREX Cidadão

    • use part of the savings (and, where appropriate, carbon revenues) to finance metabolic yields for citizens, rewarding reduction, reuse and recycling — not as “green cashback”, but as participation in the circular economic metabolism.


5. Where the Brazilian Constitution is already JIWASA (and few people notice)

None of this is “outside” the 1988 Constitution. On the contrary: the idea of Regional Zero Waste via consortia is strongly anchored in several provisions that are, today, underused.

I want to highlight four articles:

  1. Article 23 – Common competence
    The Constitution states that the Union, states, Federal District and municipalities share competence to protect the environment, combat pollution and provide health and sanitation services.

    • This means solid waste is not just a municipal problem;

    • the Constitution itself calls for cooperative federalism, opening the door for regional Zero Waste policies.

  2. Article 30 – Municipal competence
    Article 30 makes it clear that municipalities are responsible for organising and providing public services of local interest, including urban cleaning and solid-waste management.

    • So the entry point is local;

    • but without regional coordination, each municipality is condemned to “do what it can with what it has”, reproducing inequalities.

  3. Article 225 – Ecologically balanced environment
    Article 225 affirms that everyone has the right to an ecologically balanced environment, a common good of the people and essential to a healthy quality of life, and that the State and the community must defend and preserve it for present and future generations.

    • Mismanaged waste directly violates this right;

    • intermunicipal Zero Waste consortia are a concrete tool to make this article effective at the real scale of the problem: the regional scale.

  4. Article 241 – Public consortia and cooperation agreements
    Article 241 determines that the Union, states, Federal District and municipalities shall regulate, by law, public consortia and cooperation agreements, authorising the joint management of public services.

    • Here lies the legal DNA of intermunicipal waste consortia;

    • when a state government encourages regional Zero Waste consortia, it is simply giving practical effect to what Article 241 has already drawn.

In other words:
the Constitution is already potentially circular in metabolic terms.
What is missing is for the State to embody this potential in real regional policies.


6. From my sidewalk to a Zero Waste JIWASA State

When I return to my Brain Bee consciousness, I see:

  • my body learning, from the egg onward, to deal with residues without calling anything “trash”;

  • my childhood discovering that the city does not care for its body the way biology does;

  • my digital adolescence hearing all about circular economy while seeing dumps, floods and disease repeat themselves.

What I call Regional Zero Waste here is one piece of my broader proposal for Future Memory:

  • to remember, now, that every garbage bag is a piece of the region’s future;

  • to write laws today as if we were planning the metabolism of an entire generation;

  • to use intermunicipal consortia as instruments of a State JIWASA, where “we” is not rhetorical but material — present in the air we breathe, in the water we do not contaminate, in the soil we do not bury under waste.

As a citizen, I do not just want the truck to take the trash away from my door.
I want the State, at every level, to learn to think like a body:
without throwing parts of itself away, without turning territories into dumps,
without treating people as disposable.

Regional Zero Waste is not environmental perfectionism.
It is the metabolic literacy of the State
so that the future is not just the place where we throw what we don’t want to see today.


Post-2020 References

(Regional zero waste, intermunicipal consortia and State-level circular economy)

  1. Mancini, S. D. (2021). Circular Economy and Solid Waste Management: Challenges and Opportunities in Brazil. Circular Economy and Sustainability.

  2. Moraes, F. T. F. et al. (2022). Transitioning towards a Sustainable Circular City: Exploring Urban Waste and Resource Flows. Frontiers in Water.

  3. Santiago, C. D. et al. (2022). Brazilian National Waste Policy: Perspectives after a Decade of Implementation. Desenvolvimento Econômico (MADE/UFPR).

  4. ENIAC Pesquisa (2025). Circular Economy in Solid Waste Management: Framework Proposal Based on the Case of the Federal District – Brazil.

  5. REUNIR – Revista de Administração (2023). Circular Management of Solid Urban Waste in Brazil: Pathways for Circular Economy.

  6. Enhesa (2023). Out with the Old: Solid Waste Management Changes in Brazil.

  7. The Circulate Initiative (2025). City Waste Management Profile – Salvador, Brazil.

  8. BVRio (2022). Supporting Waste Management Initiatives to Accelerate the Circular Economy for Plastics in Brazil, Chile and Peru.

  9. Benedeti, L.; Pestana, A. (2023–2024). Studies on the Intermunicipal Solid Waste Consortium of Western São Paulo (CIRSOP) and the Implementation of PNRS.

  10. National Confederation of Municipalities (CNM) (2021). Mapping of Brazilian Public Consortia.

  11. State Government of Minas Gerais – Secretariat for Environment (SEMAD) (2022). Meetings with Intermunicipal Consortia for Solid Waste Management.

  12. State Government of São Paulo – Secretariat for Environment, Infrastructure and Logistics (SIMA) (2022). The Importance of Partnerships with Intermunicipal Consortia for Solid Waste Management.

Jiwasa en un Estado Democrático Inclusivo Ciencia con evidencias, política decolonial y semillas ancestrales para escapar de los “óptimos locales” del colonialismo

Jiwasa in an Inclusive Democratic State Science with evidence, decolonial politics and ancestral seeds to escape the “local optima” of colonialism

Jiwasa em um Estado Democrático Inclusivo Ciência com evidências, política decolonial e sementes ancestrais para sair dos “ótimos locais” do colonialismo

Estado Responsable, Desarrollo Vivo Cómo asumirse Estado JIWASA mejora la economía, la salud y el futuro común

Responsible State, Living Development How becoming a JIWASA State improves the economy, health and our shared future

Estado Responsável, Desenvolvimento Vivo Como assumir-se Estado JIWASA melhora economia, saúde e futuro comum

Supremo, Senado y Memoria del Futuro Pesos y contrapesos del metabolismo social frente a los 01s

Supreme Court, Senate and Future Memory Checks and balances of social metabolism against the 01s

Supremo, Senado e Memória do Futuro Freios e contrapesos do metabolismo social contra os 01s

Cláusulas Metabólicas en la Constitución Protegiendo Drex, clima y Basura Cero como patrimonio común

Metabolic Clauses in the Constitution Protecting Drex, Climate and Zero Waste as Common Heritage

Cláusulas Metabólicas na Constituição Protegendo DREX, clima e Lixo Zero como patrimônio comum

Senado JIWASA La casa de las generaciones futuras y de la Memoria del Futuro

JIWASA Senate The House of Future Generations and Future Memory

Senado JIWASA A casa das gerações futuras e da Memória do Futuro

Brasil Basura Cero 2040 Una ley nacional para el metabolismo de materiales

Brazil Zero Waste 2040 A national law for the metabolism of materials

Brasil Lixo Zero 2040 Uma lei nacional para o metabolismo de materiais

Crédito de Carbono Humano Del discurso verde al ingreso justo para el ciudadano

Human Carbon Credit From green talk to fair income for the citizen

Crédito de Carbono Humano Do discurso verde ao rendimento justo para o cidadão

DREX Cidadão como Derecho a Ingreso Metabólico Propuestas para la Ley Nacional del Ciudadano JIWASA

Drex Citizen as a Right to Metabolic Income Proposals for a National Law of the JIWASA Citizen

DREX Cidadão como Direito de Rendimento Metabólico Propostas para a lei nacional do Cidadão JIWASA

Región Basura Cero Consorcios intermunicipales y economía circular de Estado

Regional Zero Waste Intermunicipal consortia and State-level circular economy

Lixo Zero Regional Consórcios intermunicipais e economia circular de Estado

Créditos de Carbono y Pueblos del Territorio Leyes estatales para un metabolismo climático justo

Carbon Credits and Peoples of the Territory State laws for a just climate metabolism

Créditos de Carbono e Povos do Território Leis estaduais para um metabolismo climático justo

Estado JIWASA Planificación territorial como sistema complejo vivo

State JIWASA Territorial planning as a living complex system

Estado JIWASA Planejamento territorial como sistema complexo vivo

Ciudad Cero Residuos Concejales diseñando el metabolismo material del municipio

Zero Waste City Councilors Designing the Material Metabolism of the Municipality

Cidade Lixo Zero Vereadores desenhando o metabolismo material do município

DREX Ciudadano Municipal El rendimiento del Estado devuelto al Ciudadano JIWASA

Municipal DREX Citizen The State’s yield returned to the JIWASA Citizen

DREX Cidadão Municipal O rendimento do Estado devolvido ao Cidadão JIWASA

Memoria del Futuro en la Ciudad Concejales como arquitectos del metabolismo social local

Memory of the Future in the City Councilors as architects of local social metabolism

Memória do Futuro na Cidade Vereadores como arquitetos do metabolismo social local


Jiwasa Decolonial Politics Neuroscience Senador Vereador Deputado Federal Estadual Joinville NIRS EEG
Jiwasa Decolonial Politics Neuroscience
Senador Vereador Deputado Federal Estadual Joinville
NIRS EEG

#Decolonial
#Politics
#Neuroscience
#NIRSEEG
#Hyperscanner
#EEG
#NIRS
#JiwasaState
#InclusiveDemocracy
#DecolonialFutures
#WellbeingEconomy
#SocialMetabolism
#ClimateJustice
#ZeroWaste2040
#FutureGenerations
#IndigenousKnowledge
#MetabolicRights
#LivingConstitution
#HumanCarbonCredit
#CBDCdeVarejo
#DREXcidadão



#eegmicrostates #neurogliainteractions #eegmicrostates #eegnirsapplications #physiologyandbehavior #neurophilosophy #translationalneuroscience #bienestarwellnessbemestar #neuropolitics #sentienceconsciousness #metacognitionmindsetpremeditation #culturalneuroscience #agingmaturityinnocence #affectivecomputing #languageprocessing #humanking #fruición #wellbeing #neurophilosophy #neurorights #neuropolitics #neuroeconomics #neuromarketing #translationalneuroscience #religare #physiologyandbehavior #skill-implicit-learning #semiotics #encodingofwords #metacognitionmindsetpremeditation #affectivecomputing #meaning #semioticsofaction #mineraçãodedados #soberanianational #mercenáriosdamonetização
Author image

Jackson Cionek

New perspectives in translational control: from neurodegenerative diseases to glioblastoma | Brain States