Sustainability, Vol. 18, Pages 591: Implementation Pathways for the Sustainable Development of China’s 3D Printing Industry Under the “Dual Carbon” Goals: Policy Optimization and Technological Innovation

Fuente: Sustainability - Revista científica (MDPI)
Sustainability, Vol. 18, Pages 591: Implementation Pathways for the Sustainable Development of China’s 3D Printing Industry Under the “Dual Carbon” Goals: Policy Optimization and Technological Innovation
Sustainability doi: 10.3390/su18020591
Authors:
Liuyu Xuan
Yu Zhao

This study systematically examines the policy and technological pathways for the sustainable development of China’s 3D printing industry under the “Dual Carbon” goals. A three-dimensional sustainability framework is developed, integrating resource efficiency, environmental performance, and socio-economic value. Based on this framework, the study conducts a full-process analysis covering design, material preparation, manufacturing, post-processing, use, and recycling stages. The analysis identifies key carbon-reduction mechanisms of 3D printing, including material savings, reduced energy consumption, lightweight-enabled emission reduction, and distributed manufacturing. A comparative analysis of China, the European Union, and the United States reveals major constraints in China’s 3D printing sector, particularly in top-level policy design, standardization systems, legal frameworks, industrial coordination, and low-carbon core technologies. Based on these findings, the study proposes a dual-driven development pathway integrating policy optimization and technological innovation. From an institutional perspective, this pathway emphasizes green policy incentives, including strategic planning, standard setting, green finance, and collaborative governance. From a technological perspective, it highlights the importance of low-carbon material development, refined energy-efficiency management, life-cycle carbon accounting platforms, and value creation across the product life cycle. Overall, the study demonstrates that effective policy–technology synergy is essential for transforming theoretical carbon-reduction potential into scalable and practical outcomes, providing a systematic analytical framework for academic research and actionable guidance for policymakers and industry stakeholders.