Metal Mining and Planetary Boundaries: The status of sustainability considerations, the impact of “externalities” and an outlook
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Publikationen: Thesis / Studienabschlussarbeiten und Habilitationsschriften › Dissertation
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TY - BOOK
T1 - Metal Mining and Planetary Boundaries
T2 - The status of sustainability considerations, the impact of “externalities” and an outlook
AU - Tost, Michael
N1 - no embargo
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - The Great Acceleration of economic growth after World War II caused tremendous population and GDP growth, as well as growth in other socio-economic indicators, at the expense of earth system/ environmental indicators. Scientists now argue that some of these indicators are key for keeping conditions on Earth stable and that they need to stay within certain limits. They continue that humankind is, and in some cases already has been, trespassing these Planetary Boundaries. With The Great Acceleration, the demand for mineral resources has also grown exponentially. Mines have increased in number and have become larger, causing significant negative social and environmental consequences. This dissertation looks into key environmental aspects – climate change, land and water use - of the role some key metals - bauxite/aluminium, copper, gold and iron ore - play in this context. It does so by taking an Ecological Economics / Planetary Boundaries / strong sustainability approach. Through a series of five scientific papers it explores how these concepts are considered in the mining industry, how metal mining contributes to global environmental pressures, what the impact of monetary valuation would be on the industry and provides an outlook on how far innovations can improve metal mining's performance. The author finds that mining’s and society’s view on sustainability is still mainly one of weak sustainability, that the environmental pressures from metal mining matter on a global scale, that the impact of monetary valuation would be significant for CO2 emissions and that the innovations analysed do not offer a one-size-fits-all solution to resolve mining’s sustainability challenges.
AB - The Great Acceleration of economic growth after World War II caused tremendous population and GDP growth, as well as growth in other socio-economic indicators, at the expense of earth system/ environmental indicators. Scientists now argue that some of these indicators are key for keeping conditions on Earth stable and that they need to stay within certain limits. They continue that humankind is, and in some cases already has been, trespassing these Planetary Boundaries. With The Great Acceleration, the demand for mineral resources has also grown exponentially. Mines have increased in number and have become larger, causing significant negative social and environmental consequences. This dissertation looks into key environmental aspects – climate change, land and water use - of the role some key metals - bauxite/aluminium, copper, gold and iron ore - play in this context. It does so by taking an Ecological Economics / Planetary Boundaries / strong sustainability approach. Through a series of five scientific papers it explores how these concepts are considered in the mining industry, how metal mining contributes to global environmental pressures, what the impact of monetary valuation would be on the industry and provides an outlook on how far innovations can improve metal mining's performance. The author finds that mining’s and society’s view on sustainability is still mainly one of weak sustainability, that the environmental pressures from metal mining matter on a global scale, that the impact of monetary valuation would be significant for CO2 emissions and that the innovations analysed do not offer a one-size-fits-all solution to resolve mining’s sustainability challenges.
KW - Metallbergbau
KW - Gold
KW - Kupfer
KW - Eisen
KW - Aluminium
KW - Nachhaltigkeit
KW - Externalitäten
KW - Ökologische Ökonomie
KW - Umweltauswirkungen
KW - CO2
KW - Klimawandel
KW - Landnutzung
KW - Wasserverbrauch
KW - Preiseinfluss
KW - Metal mining
KW - gold
KW - bauxite
KW - Iron ore
KW - copper
KW - aluminium
KW - Planetary Boundaries
KW - sustainability
KW - externalities
KW - ecological economics
KW - CO2 pricing
KW - ecosystem services
KW - valuation
KW - innovation
KW - water use
KW - land use
KW - CO2 emissions
KW - SDGs
M3 - Doctoral Thesis
ER -