Knowledge Agora



Similar Articles

Title Mapping the anthropogenic stock in Germany: Metabolic evidence for a circular economy
ID_Doc 20095
Authors Schiller, G; Müller, F; Ortlepp, R
Title Mapping the anthropogenic stock in Germany: Metabolic evidence for a circular economy
Year 2017
Published
Abstract The world's industrialised nations have accumulated a wealth of assets in the form of buildings, infrastructure and other durable goods. These assets constitute a valuable reservoir of secondary raw materials. This "anthropogenic material stock" should be understood as a future capital stock that must be systematically managed and exploited. Yet this capital stock has hitherto been largely ignored in discussions on resource efficiency, which instead have focused on inputs of primary raw materials. This is partly due to insufficient knowledge of the size and constitution of this material stock as well as its dynamics. Therefore, a project was set up by Germany's Federal Environment Agency to provide the missing information. Project results offer a comprehensive view of material stocks, inflows and outflows connected to durable goods. Thus we note an annual per capita growth in Germany's anthropogenic material stock of 10 t. In the last 50 years an estimated 42 billion tons of material has been added to the anthropogenic stock. Not all of this can be classified to primary groups of goods. Around 28 million tons of material has been consumed by buildings, infrastructure, building services as well as durable consumer goods. Of this figure, over 99% can be located in the built environment. This mass is approximately 79 times larger than the material mass currently consumed every year by these sectors. Annual outflow from the stock is around 0.8%. The annual rate of growth of the observed stock of goods is 0.5%. The various figures can be further broken down according to individual groups of goods and material groups. This knowledge provides the necessary foundation for the long-term monitoring of the anthropogenic stock and, moreover, is an important step in the evidence-based development of a model to incorporate and to improve closed-loop material flows as well as to support politics of securing supply of raw materials. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
PDF

Similar Articles

ID Score Article
24834 Wiedenhofer, D; Fishman, T; Plank, B; Miatto, A; Lauk, C; Haas, W; Haberl, H; Krausmann, F Prospects for a saturation of humanity's resource use? An analysis of material stocks and flows in nine world regions from 1900 to 2035(2021)
26301 Krausmann, F; Wiedenhofer, D; Lauk, C; Haas, W; Tanikawa, H; Fishman, T; Miatto, A; Schandl, H; Haberl, H Global socioeconomic material stocks rise 23-fold over the 20th century and require half of annual resource use(2017)Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America, 114, 8
6090 Nuss, P; Gunther, J; Kosmol, J; Golde, M; Muller, F; Frerk, M Monitoring framework for the use of natural resources in Germany(2021)
6596 Pfaff, M; Glöser-Chahoud, S; Chrubasik, L; Walz, R Resource efficiency in the German copper cycle: Analysis of stock and flow dynamics resulting from different efficiency measures(2018)
22166 Matasci, C; Gauch, M; Böni, H How To Increase Circularity In The Swiss Economy?(2021)
2574 Winterstetter, A; Heuss-Assbichler, S; Stegemann, J; Kral, U; Wäger, P; Osmani, M; Rechberger, H The role of anthropogenic resource classification in supporting the transition to a circular economy(2021)
Scroll