Circular Innovation Council is excited to continue our new quarterly series that brings our members together for learning, networking, and sharing the latest updates from CIC. Join us for our next Member Open House on Wednesday, July 29 at 12pm ET.
In this summer session you will:
📣Hear the latest updates from CIC
👋Join us in welcoming new members
👀Get a sneak peak into the Circular Economy Month 2026 campaign and learn how your organization can take part this year! Get inspired by hearing how CIC members engage their employees and citizens on the circular economy. Interested in speaking? Let us know!
❓Ask us anything! Each Open House dedicates time at the end for an open Q&A. It’s a great opportunity to connect with the CIC team and other members.
Register now! We look forward to connecting with you for our summer session. Can’t make it? Feel free to share this invite with a colleague from your organization.
This meeting is exclusive to members of CIC. If your organization is not yet a member, please contact Shirley@CircularInnovation.ca to join.
This month the Circular Innovation Council (CIC) is pleased to announce the return of the highly successful Canadian Circular Economy Summit (CCES) and the collaboration with the Ellen MacArthur Foundation (EMF).
Date: June 2 – 4, 2027
Location: Edmonton Convention Centre, Edmonton, Alberta
CCES 2027 will be led by the Circular Innovation Council and co-hosted in partnership with the City of Edmonton and Alberta Ecotrust Foundation. Hosted in Alberta for the first time, the event will bring together a diverse network of business and industry leaders, policymakers, innovators, entrepreneurs, academics, and researchers who are shaping Canada’s circular future.
As the CCES’s Official International Ambassador, EMF will help shape the CCES 2027 program, providing valuable global insights on priority subject areas for the development of a Circular Economy Framework for Canada.
We will continue to announce updates through the year, with registration expected to open in the Fall.
This week marked an important milestone for the global reuse movement with the launch of a new universal symbol designed to identify reusable packaging and the systems that support it. Developed through the PR3/CSA (Packaging Reuse and Refill Protocol) Global Standards Panel, the symbol will help consumers recognize reusable containers, collection infrastructure, washing systems, and other elements of reuse networks wherever they encounter them. Selected through a global design competition that attracted 236 submissions from 29 countries, the symbol is intended to create a common visual language for reuse as these systems continue to expand around the world.
The launch evokes parallels to the early days of recycling. Decades ago, the Mobius Loop became a powerful and universally recognized symbol that helped consumers understand and participate in emerging recycling systems. Today, reuse is at a similar inflection point. As reusable packaging moves from pilot projects to increasingly coordinated systems across retail, food service, events, workplaces, and communities, a clear and recognizable symbol can help build consumer awareness, trust, and participation. Importantly, the new symbol was intentionally designed to be distinct from the Mobius Loop while reflecting the concepts of return, circulation, and continuous use that sit at the heart of a circular economy.
While recycling transformed how we think about managing materials after use, reuse encourages us to rethink packaging before it becomes waste. The introduction of a global reuse symbol is another sign that reuse is moving from a niche concept to a recognized and growing part of the circular economy. As adoption continues to accelerate worldwide, shared standards, common symbols, and collaborative systems will help make reuse an increasingly familiar and accessible choice for businesses and consumers alike.
As an active participant in the ongoing development of the PR3 and CSA reuse
standards, Circular Innovation Council continues to contribute Canadian expertise and real-world lessons from reuse system design and implementation. The launch of the new global reuse symbol demonstrates how collaborative standards development can help address common barriers to adoption by creating shared tools and language for consumers and businesses alike. As reuse systems continue to evolve, this work will play an important role in supporting their growth from individual pilots to a connected and recognizable global movement.
Summer is an excellent time for community events and activities that encourage circular living. See what our municipal partners have been up to:
York Region Curbside Giveaway Days
Organizing curbside giveaway days are an easy, yet practical solution for municipalities to encourage reuse of common household items within their communities. The concept is simple: on specific days, residents can put unwanted items at the curb labelled FREE, which can be taken by other residents free of charge. These initiatives bring the community together, increase access to common everyday products at no cost, while helping keep items in use for longer.
York Region municipalities have several giveaway days coming up throughout summer. Learn more here.
New Outdoor Sports Equipment Lockers in Peel Region
Staying active and learning a new sport shouldn’t require you to purchase your own equipment. This new sharing initiative in Peel Region, provides free access to sports equipment in 60 parks and outdoor recreation sites at across Brampton and Mississauga, via Equip Sport lockers, stocked with soccer balls, basketballs, and more. This is just one excellent example of the sharing economy in action – increasing access to commonly used items and reducing the need own everything we use.
“Imagine a Canada that is resilient, prosperous, and low-carbon, where circularity shapes how our communities are built and governed.
Turning this vision into reality requires dismantling misconceptions about the circular economy, which remain a key barrier to progress.
To better understand this transformation, we spoke with Jo-Anne St. Godard, Executive Director of the Circular Innovation Council, about how the organization is advancing national understanding of the circular economy and enabling leaders to translate principles into practice.”
In the Standards Issue of Circular Economy Magazine, we explore the latest developments in the world of circular economy implementation, from the standards, certifications, and frameworks guiding circular action to innovative programs, movements, and processes setting a new benchmark for achieving circularity.
We want to say a big thank you to our new member that joined us in May 2026. Thank you for becoming a part of our fast growing membership here at Circular Innovation Council!
Okotoks is flanked by the front range of the Rocky Mountains to the west and is situated only 18 kilometres south of Calgary’s city limits. Natural beauty, ideal location, and a commitment to sustainability. Their main priority currently is building a circular economy strategy/roadmap for the Town of Okotoks to help guide future programs, partnerships, policies, and community engagement initiatives.
Alberta Ecotrust Foundation is a non-profit organization advancing environmental and climate solutions across Alberta. We collaborate with diverse partners from government, industry, non-profits, and Indigenous communities to create a future where both people and nature thrive. Alberta Ecotrust supports projects and initiatives that add value, reuse and promote durability, remanufacturing, and recycling to keep products, components and materials circulating in the economy.
Plastic Free July
July 1 – 31
International Plastic Bag Free Day
July 3
International Conference on Environment and Sustainable Development; Ottawa, Canada
July 9 – 10
International Conference on Advances in Environment-Friendly Technologies and Applications; Ottawa, Canada
July 9 – 10
International Conference on Waste Management; Ottawa, Canada
July 9 – 10
International Conference on Carbon Footprinting and Life Cycle Assessment in Ecosystem Management; Toronto, Canada
July 15 – 16
International Conference on Waste Management, Recycling and Environment; Quebec City, Canada
July 16 – 17
International Conference on Environmental Pollution Management; Toronto, Canada
July 23 – 24
We respectfully acknowledge that we live, work and play on the traditional territory of many Indigenous Nations and we humbly extend our respect to Indigenous individuals, communities and Elders, past and present, as the traditional custodians of this land.
Circular Innovation Council is a registered charity.
Charity Registration Number: 119112118 RR 0001