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- Stoffströme und Ressourcenmanagement (15) (remove)
A reduction in working hours is being considered to tackle issues associated with ecological sustainability, social equity and enhanced life satisfaction - a so-called triple dividend. With respect to an environmental dividend, the authors analyse the time use rebound effects of reducing working time. They explore how an increase in leisure time triggers a rearrangement of time and expenditure budgets, and thus the use of resources in private households. Does it hold true that time-intensive activities replace resource-intensive consumption when people have more discretionary time at their disposal? This study on environmental issues is complemented by introducing the parameters of voluntary social engagement and individual life satisfaction as potential co-benefits of rebound effects. In order to analyse the first dividend, a mixed methods approach is adopted, enabling two models of time use rebound effects to be applied. First, semi-standardised interviews reveal that environmentally ambiguous substitutions of activities occur following a reduction in working hours. Second, estimates for Germany from national surveys on time use and expenditure show composition effects of gains in leisure time and income loss. For the latter, we estimate the marginal propensity to consume and the marginal propensity to time use. The results show that time savings due to a reduction in working time trigger relevant rebound effects in terms of resource use. However, both the qualitative and quantitative findings put the rebound effects following a reduction in working time into perspective. Time use rebound effects lead to increased voluntary social engagement and greater life satisfaction, the second and third dividends.
Poor sustainability and increasing economic shortcomings in fossil raw material use besides further technical developments of substitutes lead to a growing potential for CO2-utilisation. Hence, we balanced CO2-based methane and methanol production in a life cycle assessment and identified CO2-utilisation as a greenhouse gas saving method. However, it requires a lot of renewable energy.
The global demand for timber is increasing, with prognoses for the EU showing particularly high growth to meet renewable energy targets. However, there are limited options to meet rising timber demands within the EU, and global land competition to meet world food, energy and material needs, as well as to conserve high value nature areas, is increasing. This dissertation addresses the knowledge gap between the pressures of increased land use abroad and the underlying drivers of land use change. It argues that there is a high risk of problem shifting if EU policies to increase timber consumption are not accompanied by a monitoring system that accounts for consumption levels and provides a benchmark for sustainability.
Rohstoffkreisläufe sind eine aussichtsreiche Möglichkeit, die Abhängigkeiten von natürlichen Ressourcen, die knapper werden, zu reduzieren, Kosten zu sparen und gleichzeitig die Umwelt zu schonen. Die Schließung von Stoffkreisläufen steht hoch wie nie auf der politischen Agenda: Angesichts schwankender und absehbar steigender Rohstoffkosten und vermehrter Unsicherheiten über die Versorgung der Industrie mit Rohstoffen wird die umfassende Transformation der Abfallwirtschaft zu einer Kreislaufwirtschaft zunehmend als Schlüssel für zukunftsfähiges und erfolgreiches Wirtschaften gesehen.
Der vorliegende Bericht bietet einen Überblick über innovative Technologien und Verfahren, Primär- durch Sekundärrohstoffe zu ersetzen, basierend auf einem Screening aktueller Forschungsprojekte und Fachpublikationen.
Der Verfasser legt eine vergleichende Analyse von Abfallwirtschaftsregimen in drei deutschen Stadtregionen vor. Als Fallbeispiele wurden Frankfurt in der Rhein-Main-Region, Berlin als Kern der Metropolregion Berlin-Brandenburg und Bochum im Ruhrgebiet ausgewählt. Einerseits weisen die drei Stadtregionen eine ganze Reihe von Gemeinsamkeiten auf, die sie für einen solchen Vergleich geeignet erscheinen lassen.
Alle drei Stadtregionen bilden Zentren wichtiger Metropolregionen in Deutschland, denen angesichts ihrer Bevölkerungsdichte sowie der ökonomischen und politischen Bedeutung besondere Relevanz für die Planung von Infrastruktursystemen zukommt. Gleichzeitig unterscheidet sich jedoch die Bedeutung der drei Fallregionen innerhalb ihrer Metropolregion durchaus deutlich, von der absoluten Dominanz in Berlin-Brandenburg bis zur Polyzentralität im Ruhrgebiet, woraus sich auch unterschiedliche Herausforderungen an regionale Planungsverbände und die Gestaltung der Kooperationsbeziehungen mit den Umlandgemeinden ergeben.
Als Bestandteile von Metropolregionen sind sie alle drei intensiv in internationale Geschäfts- und Wissensnetzwerke eingebunden, sind Standort für die Entwicklung soziotechnischer Innovationen und verfügen in vielen Bereichen über hochqualifizierte Humanressourcen. Auch im Hinblick auf die spezielle Situation der Abfallwirtschaft zeigen sich vergleichbare Ausgangsbedingungen: In allen drei Regionen wurde auf eine vollständige Privatisierung der kommunalen Abfallwirtschaft verzichtet, nach wie vor werden mit der Sammlung und Entsorgung von Abfällen Unternehmen beauftragt, die sich überwiegend im kommunalen Besitz befinden.
Biodiversity loss is widely recognized as a serious global environmental change process. While large-scale metal mining activities do not belong to the top drivers of such change, these operations exert or may intensify pressures on biodiversity by adversely changing habitats, directly and indirectly, at local and regional scales. So far, analyses of global spatial dynamics of mining and its burden on biodiversity focused on the overlap between mines and protected areas or areas of high value for conservation. However, it is less clear how operating metal mines are globally exerting pressure on zones of different biodiversity richness; a similar gap exists for unmined but known mineral deposits. By using vascular plants' diversity as a proxy to quantify overall biodiversity, this study provides a first examination of the global spatial distribution of mines and deposits for five key metals across different biodiversity zones. The results indicate that mines and deposits are not randomly distributed, but concentrated within intermediate and high diversity zones, especially bauxite and silver. In contrast, iron, gold, and copper mines and deposits are closer to a more proportional distribution while showing a high concentration in the intermediate biodiversity zone. Considering the five metals together, 63% and 61% of available mines and deposits, respectively, are located in intermediate diversity zones, comprising 52% of the global land terrestrial surface. 23% of mines and 20% of ore deposits are located in areas of high plant diversity, covering 17% of the land. 13% of mines and 19% of deposits are in areas of low plant diversity, comprising 31% of the land surface. Thus, there seems to be potential for opening new mines in areas of low biodiversity in the future.
Einsparpotenziale beim Kunststoffeinsatz durch Industrie, Handel und Haushalte in Deutschland
(2016)
In the future, the capacities of renewable SNG (synthetic natural gas) will expand significantly. Pilot plants are underway to use surplus renewable power, mainly from wind, for electrolysis and the production of hydrogen, which is methanated and fed into the existing gas pipeline grid. Pilot projects aim at the energetic use of SNG for households and transport in particular for gas fueled cars. Another option could be the use of SNG as feedstock in chemical industry.
The early stage of development raises the question of whether SNG should be better used for mobility or the production of chemicals. This study compares the global warming potential (GWP) of the production of fossil natural gas (NG) and carbon-dioxide (CO2)-based SNG and its use for car transport versus chemical use in the form of synthesis gas. Since the potential of wind energy for SNG production is mainly located in northern Germany, the consequences by a growing distance between production in the North and transport to the South of Germany are also examined.
The results indicate that CO2-based SNG produced with wind power would lead to lower GWP when substituting NG for both uses in either transport or chemical production. Differences of the savings potential occur in short-distance pipeline transport. The critical factor is the energy required for compression along the process chain.
The current utilisation of natural resources in Germany and Europe is not sustainable, as inter alia stated by the German government as well as by the European Commission. At the same time, increased resource efficiency could lead to various environmental but also economic benefits. This brief study commissioned by Changing Markets presents developments in the field of resource efficiency policies, analyses the status quo of resource consumption with a special focus on fast moving consumer goods and describes potential effects of resource conservations.