2017
DOI: 10.1038/nature21359
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Mineral supply for sustainable development requires resource governance

Abstract: Successful delivery of the United Nations sustainable development goals and implementation of the Paris Agreement requires technologies that utilize a wide range of minerals in vast quantities. Metal recycling and technological change will contribute to sustaining supply, but mining must continue and grow for the foreseeable future to ensure that such minerals remain available to industry. New links are needed between existing institutional frameworks to oversee responsible sourcing of minerals, trajectories f… Show more

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Cited by 524 publications
(304 citation statements)
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“…Given that meeting sustainable development goals will require an adequate supply of resources from both primary and secondary sources [40], the country-by-country projections as shown in this paper provide a valuable-publicly available dataset-to understand primary supply from known resources at this point in time. Whilst more resources will be discovered, social economic and environmental constraints may also constrain the development of known resources, a point that is somewhat backgrounded by Meinert et al [38].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given that meeting sustainable development goals will require an adequate supply of resources from both primary and secondary sources [40], the country-by-country projections as shown in this paper provide a valuable-publicly available dataset-to understand primary supply from known resources at this point in time. Whilst more resources will be discovered, social economic and environmental constraints may also constrain the development of known resources, a point that is somewhat backgrounded by Meinert et al [38].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More metals will be needed (Arrobas et al, 2017;Ali et al, 2017). Whether they are obtained from land or from the deep sea is a question that the economics of either operation can only partially answer.…”
Section: Figure 65mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…End-of-life vehicles could indeed become viable "urban mines", and so the upcoming waves of secondary materials available from AEVs call for heightened focus to develop the technologies, policies, and infrastructure that would enable using these materials to their full potential, especially as global primary supply options are slow to respond to increases in demands [75]. From a technological perspective, further knowledge and know-how to extract and recycle critical materials from end-of-life vehicles is required.…”
Section: Outlook For Rees In Aevsmentioning
confidence: 99%