Sustainability, Vol. 18, Pages 3302: A Decision Support System for Sustainable Circular Economy Transition in Italian Historical Small Towns: The H-SMA-CE Project

Fuente: Sustainability - Revista científica (MDPI)
Sustainability, Vol. 18, Pages 3302: A Decision Support System for Sustainable Circular Economy Transition in Italian Historical Small Towns: The H-SMA-CE Project
Sustainability doi: 10.3390/su18073302
Authors:
Giuseppe Ioppolo
Grazia Calabrò
Giuseppe Caristi
Cristina Ciliberto
Ilaria Russo
Luisa De Simone
Antonio Lopes
Roberta Arbolino

Historical small towns (HSTs) embody irreplaceable cultural heritage and territorial identity, facing depopulation, economic marginalization, and infrastructure decay. Improving their liveability and attractiveness is essential to reverse these trends and boost sustainable development. In this context, HSTs are potential drivers of circular and sustainable socio-technical systems, where the circular economy (CE) offers a framework for local sustainability. However, HSTs lack adequate sustainable CE implementation tools. This study, the culmination of the H-SMA-CE project, develops a Decision Support System (DSS) to assist local policymakers in planning CE transitions in Italian HSTs. The DSS integrates three building blocks: context analysis (metabolic flows, stakeholder networks), an intervention library with cost–benefit data, and a composite Municipal Circular Economy Index (MCEI). The tool enables users to assess baseline circularity, simulate scenarios, and identify optimal investment portfolios through multi-objective optimization. This approach allows for the simultaneous evaluation of the benefits of each sustainability aspect, i.e., environmental, economic and social. Tested on the municipality of Taurasi (Italy), an HST with a wine-based economy, the results show that balanced intervention strategies yield greater circularity improvements than single-objective approaches. The paper contributes to the discourse on digital tools for sustainability transitions, offering a replicable model for evidence-based CE governance in heritage-rich territorial contexts.