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Thursday, 23 January 2020
World’s consumption of materials hits record 100bn tonnes a year
Half of the 100.6bn tonnes of materials were sand, clay, gravel and cement for building, plus minerals quarried for fertiliser.
Photograph: Zoonar GmbH/Alamy
The amount of material consumed by humanity has passed 100bn tonnes every year, a report has revealed, but the proportion being recycled is falling.
The climate and wildlife emergencies are driven by the unsustainable
extraction of fossil fuels, metals, building materials and trees. The
report’s authors warn that treating the world’s resources as limitless
is leading towards global disaster.
The materials used by the global economy have quadrupled since 1970,
far faster than the population, which has doubled. In the last two
years, consumption has jumped by more than 8% but the reuse of resources
has fallen from 9.1% to 8.6%.
The report, by the Circle Economy
thinktank, was launched at the World Economic Forum in Davos. It shows
that, on average, every person on Earth uses more than 13 tonnes of
materials per year. But the report also found that some nations are
making steps towards circular economies in which renewable energy underpins systems where waste and pollution are reduced to zero.
“We risk global disaster if we continue to treat the world’s
resources as if they are limitless,” said Harald Friedl, the chief
executive of Circle Economy. “Governments must urgently adopt circular
economy solutions if we want to achieve a high quality of life for close
to 10bn people by mid-century without destabilising critical planetary
processes.”
Marc de Wit, the report’s lead author, said: “We are still fuelling
our growth in population and affluence by the extraction of virgin
materials. We can’t do this indefinitely – our hunger for virgin
material needs to be halted.”
The report found that 100.6bn tonnes of materials were consumed in
2017, the latest year for which data is available. Half of the total is
sand, clay, gravel and cement used for building, along with the other
minerals quarried to produce fertiliser. Coal, oil and gas make up 15%
and metal ores 10%. The final quarter are the plants and trees used for
food and fuel.
The lion’s share of the materials – 40% – is turned into housing.
Other major categories include food, transport, healthcare,
communications, and consumer goods such as clothes and furniture.
Almost
a third of the annual materials remain in use after a year, such as
buildings and vehicles. But 15% is emitted into the atmosphere as
climate-heating gases and nearly a quarter is discarded into the
environment, such as plastic in waterways and oceans. A third of the
materials is treated as waste, mostly going to landfill and mining spoil
heaps. Just 8.6% is recycled.
“This report sparks an alarm for all governments,” said Carolina
Schmidt, Chile’s environment minister. “We need to deploy all the
policies to really catalyse this transformation [to a circular
economy].”
Cristianne Close of the conservation group WWF said: “The circular
economy provides a framework for reducing our impacts, protecting
ecosystems and living within the means of one planet.”
The report said increasing recycling can make economies more
competitive, improve living conditions and help to meet emissions
targets and avoid deforestation. It reported that 13 European countries
have adopted circular economy roadmaps, including France, Germany and
Spain, and that Colombia became the first Latin American country to
launch a similar policy in 2019.
China’s ban on waste imports aims to encourage domestic recycling,
the report said, but has also stimulated the development of circular
economy strategies in Australia and other countries which previously
exported their waste to China.
Janez Potočnik, a former European environment commissioner and the
co-chair of the UN Environment Programme international resource panel,
said the world needed to learn to do more with less and replace
ownership with sharing, as is increasingly being seen with cars.
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