Resources for our Future

Resources for our Future

Key Issues and Best Practices in Resource Efficiency

  • Autor: Weterings, Rob; Bastein, Ton; Tukker, Arnold; Rademaker, Michel; de Ridder, Marjolein
  • Editor: Amsterdam University Press
  • Colección: Strategy & Change - HCSS
  • ISBN: 9789089645296
  • eISBN Pdf: 9789048518777
  • Lugar de publicación:  Amsterdam , Holanda
  • Año de publicación digital: 2013
  • Mes: Julio
  • Páginas: 200
  • Idioma: Ingles
Compiling years of research into the geopolitical, economic, and ecological dimensions of material scarcity and resource efficiency, Resources for our Future provides a concise analysis of international resource efficiency. Offering an inspiring account of industrial best practices, the editors have put together a broad range of case studies, which focus on the chemical, textile, and food industries.  
  • Contents
  • Foreword
  • Management summary
  • 1. Introduction
    • 1.1 Drivers of resource use
    • 1.2 Decoupling
    • 1.3 Global dimensions
    • 1.4 Key issues and best practices
  • 2. Resource constraints
    • 2.1 A classification of challenges
    • 2.2 Energy resources: security of supply and climate impacts
    • 2.3 Water and land: ecological footprint
    • 2.4 Abiotic resources: metal ores and industrial minerals
    • 2.5 Abiotic resources: construction minerals
    • 2.6 Biotic resources: HANPP and biodiversity problems
    • 2.7 Linkages and trade-offs
    • 2.8 Conclusions
  • 3. The geopolitics of resources
    • 3.1 International trade flows of natural resources
    • 3.2 Price developments
    • 3.3 The emerging international system
    • 3.4 Policy trends
    • 3.5 The EU: challenges and policy responses
    • 3.6 The Netherlands
    • 3.7 Conclusions
  • 4. Resource strategies
    • 4.1 Mining primary resources
    • 4.2 Process optimization
    • 4.3 Materials recycling
    • 4.4 Radical redesign of products
    • 4.5 Substitution: easier said than done
    • 4.6 Intensifying the use of products and services
    • 4.7 Shifting expenditures to low-impact products and services
    • 4.8 Improving quality of life without spending money
    • 4.9 Conclusions
  • 5. Resource efficiency in the built environment
    • 5.1 Bricks outlive their buildings
    • 5.2 Reducing carbon dioxide by reusing secondary materials
    • 5.3 No needs to barbecue secondary asphalt
    • 5.4 Building a business model on borrowed materials
  • 6. Resource efficiency in the food sector
    • 6.1 Brewing a better future
    • 6.2 Making a business case of sustainability
    • 6.3 'Green Deal' turns Holland into net exporter of phosphate
    • 6.4 Insects as new raw material and protein source
  • 7. Biotic resources in the process industry
    • 7.1 Clutching at straws to make paper
    • 7.2 Beet thick juice is naphtha to bio-based economy
    • 7.3 YXY platform molecule - the green 'Intel Inside'
    • 7.4 Sowing the seeds of the third industrial revolution
    • 7.5 Waste is culturally defined
  • 8. Resource efficiency in the metal and consumer electronics industries
    • 8.1 Improving raw material efficiency in the steel industry
    • 8.2 Making recycled materials mainstream
    • 8.3 Waste management and the circular economy
    • 8.4 Sustainability as a driver of innovation
  • 9. Resource efficiency in fashion and furnishings
    • 9.1 Adding volume to the circular economy
    • 9.2 Designed for reincarnation
    • 9.3 Sustainability with substance
    • 9.4 Dyeing textiles without water
  • 10. The challenges ahead
    • 10.1 Understanding the challenges
    • 10.2 Business opportunities
    • 10.3 Creating the necessary conditions
  • Acknowledgements
  • References
  • About the authors

SUSCRÍBASE A NUESTRO BOLETÍN

Al suscribirse, acepta nuestra Politica de Privacidad