Exploring the engine of anthropogenic iron cycles
- 31 October 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 103 (44) , 16111-16116
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0603375103
Abstract
Stocks of products in use are the pivotal engines that drive anthropogenic metal cycles: They support the lives of people by providing services to them; they are sources for future secondary resources (scrap); and demand for in-use stocks generates demand for metals. Despite their great importance and their impacts on other parts of the metal cycles and the environment, the study of in-use stocks has heretofore been widely neglected. Here we investigate anthropogenic and geogenic iron stocks in the United States (U.S.) by analyzing the iron cycle over the period 1900–2004. Our results show the following. ( i ) Over the last century, the U.S. iron stock in use increased to 3,200 Tg (million metric tons), which is the same order of magnitude as the remaining U.S. iron stock in identified ores. On a global scale, anthropogenic iron stocks are less significant compared with natural ores, but their relative importance is increasing. ( ii ) With a perfect recycling system, the U.S. could substitute scrap utilization for domestic mining. ( iii ) The per-capita in-use iron stock reached saturation at 11–12 metric tons in ≈1980. This last finding, if applicable to other economies as well, could allow a significant improvement of long-term forecasting of steel demand and scrap availability in emerging market economies and therefore has major implications for resource sustainability, recycling technology, and industrial and governmental policy.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Atmospheric CorrosionPublished by Wiley ,2016
- Mineral Resources, Economics and the EnvironmentPublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,2015
- Making Metals Count: Applications of Material Flow AnalysisEnvironmental Engineering Science, 2006
- Metal stocks and sustainabilityProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Stock dynamics for forecasting material flows—Case study for housing in The NetherlandsPublished by Elsevier ,2005
- Twentieth century copper stocks and flows in North America: A dynamic analysisEcological Economics, 2005
- Historical statistics for mineral and material commodities in the United StatesPublished by US Geological Survey ,2005
- Long‐term Coordination of Timber Production and Consumption Using a Dynamic Material and Energy Flow AnalysisJournal of Industrial Ecology, 2004
- Sustainable metal management exemplified by copper in the USARegional Environmental Change, 1999