
Amsterdam City Doughnut
Downscaling the global concept of the Doughnut to turn it into a tool for transformative action in the City of Amsterdam

(This story was updated with some additional links and information in April 2025)
* The Amsterdam City Doughnut report (English) *
* 암스테르담 시티 도넛 (한국어) *
This story is over five years old. For all the latest news and tools on Doughnut Portraits visit this dedicated page including recent stories from Riga, Tomelilla, California, Barcelona, Geneva, Melbourne, Birmingham, Brussels, London and more.
Overview
In April 2020, during the depths of the COVID-19 lockdown, the City of Amsterdam provided a much-needed surge of hope worldwide by publicly embracing the Doughnut as a tool to guide their social and economic recovery from the pandemic.

This announcement came as a milestone in the ongoing engagement with the Doughnut by Dutch officials and changemakers, especially following the translation of Doughnut Economics: 7 ways to think like a 21st century economist in early 2018. Momentum picked up in Amsterdam during a series of workshops run in collaboration with DEAL’s locally based partners Circle Economy in 2019, where city officials came together to design one of the city’s most ambitious initiatives: Amsterdam’s strategy to be 100% circular by 2050.
Based on the success of the Amsterdam Circular Strategy, the City joined the Thriving Cities Initiative – a collaboration between Biomimicry 3.8, C40 Cities, Circle Economy, and Doughnut Economics Action Lab (DEAL) – to create the first Amsterdam City Doughnut Portrait. Since then, Amsterdam has included an updated version of their Portrait results in their biennial 'State of the City 2020-2021' report, with plans to continue such monitoring in-house on an ongoing basis.
The Amsterdam City Doughnut was the first public presentation of the City Portrait approach to downscaling the global Doughnut to the city scale. The aim of this approach is to provide a holistic snapshot of the city’s many complex interconnections with the world in which it is embedded, by considering its local aspirations – to be thriving people in a thriving place – and global responsibilities, both social and ecological.
You can find the updated methodological guide for creating city portraits, called 'Doughnut Data Portraits' here, and you can see a collection of Data Portraits done by others here.
By introducing Doughnut-thinking into policymaking, coupled with the self-organising and dynamic uptake of the Doughnut by the city’s civil society through the Amsterdam Doughnut Coalition, Amsterdam has provided an inspirational and pioneering starting point for turning Doughnut Economics into 21st century transformative action.
In 2025, over 50 local governments from around the world have brought in Doughnut Economics (DE) in their policies and processes - to learn more about the work of other cities and regions working with DE, check out our guide Cities&Regions: Let's Get Started, that includes case studies from 12 cities, including Amsterdam.
Downloads
* The Amsterdam City Doughnut (English) *
* 암스테르담 시티 도넛 (한국어) *
Share
Tags
Share
-
Member
Yasmin P
-
Member
Marije Bijl
Vienna
I have always had an adversity to money, and talk about money. And I always thought the talk in newspapers etc about the economy was at the least weird, at the worst mean spirited. I realise that our world is completely evolving around, and built for, money and its workings, and that what we get taught about economy is a scheme we are meant to stay put in. The fact that there seems to be a movement now that does not get squashed or peters out (at least not immediately) that seeks to change exactly these things about money and the economy, makes e enthusiastic about it. I came to this because of the writings of Kate Raworth, Piketty, Stephanie Kelton, George Monbiot, Rutger Bregman, BIEN (Basic Income Earth Network/basicincome.org) Evonomics.com Georgeo Simonetti and Margrit Kennedy. We MUST change, and this change needs to be from the ground up. Economy is ground work.
-
Member
Gustave Campigneulles
-
Member
Julie Breslin
Giffnock, Scotland, United Kingdom
I work in Local Government with a responsibility for strategic planning and community participation.
-
Member
Jon Walker
Sheffield, England, United Kingdom
-
Member
Bence Szokoly
Madrid, Comunidad de Madrid, Spain
I am a father of two, English teacher, volunteer for Red Cross and a potter who is passionate about economics, the power of community and the future of humanity.
-
Member
Tarik Eddial
Zutphen, Gelderland, The Netherlands
-
Member
Benoit Ruysschaert
Hasselt, Vlaanderen, België
As a PhD researcher at UHasselt (Environmental Economics) and HEC Liège (Smart City Institute) I perform research on how cities can achieve their circular objectives.