The effects of changes in recycling patterns on United Kingdom resource consumption

Recycling, substitution and product life extension are identified as significant factors contributing to an extension of the time to exhaustion of industrially Dnportant materials. A quantitative assessment of the sign~icance of virtually all materials to the U.K. is made. Copper is identified as on...

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Main Author: Nott, Michael V.
Published: Aston University 1981
Subjects:
333
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.544589
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5445892017-04-20T03:24:38ZThe effects of changes in recycling patterns on United Kingdom resource consumptionNott, Michael V.1981Recycling, substitution and product life extension are identified as significant factors contributing to an extension of the time to exhaustion of industrially Dnportant materials. A quantitative assessment of the sign~icance of virtually all materials to the U.K. is made. Copper is identified as one of the most important materials deserving of further investigation into potential resource savings through increased recycling. The other factors listed above are accounted for in the modelling technique employed. united Kingdom copper flows are qualitatively and statistically described for the years 1949 - 1976. Less accurate statistics are developed for 1922 - 1948. Adaptive expectations type causal models of total, unalloyed, and alloyed copper demand are successfully construGted and are used to generate future scenarios. Evidence is demonstrated for a break in the historical link between U.K. copper demand and industrial production. Simple causal models of potential copper scrap supply are constructed and a comparison made with actual old scrap withdrawals. Accurate adaptive expectations type models of total scrap demand are developed, but no conclusion is reached about the price elasticity of scrap demand. Various scenarios of copper goods demand are forecast and their effecl on copper scrap demand. The potential to recover up to an extra 100.000 tonnes/year of generally lower grade old scrap is identified. policy options are examined and the following recommendations made: 1) A total investment of up to £67 million in secondary refining capacity by the year 2000 is needed. 2) The copper scrap content of copper bearing goods should be specified to aid recovery. 3) A U.K. copper scrap buffer stock scheme would be advantageous for G~e secondary copper industry. Finally the methodology used is summarised for potential application to other materials.333Chemical EngineeringAston Universityhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.544589http://publications.aston.ac.uk/10155/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 333
Chemical Engineering
spellingShingle 333
Chemical Engineering
Nott, Michael V.
The effects of changes in recycling patterns on United Kingdom resource consumption
description Recycling, substitution and product life extension are identified as significant factors contributing to an extension of the time to exhaustion of industrially Dnportant materials. A quantitative assessment of the sign~icance of virtually all materials to the U.K. is made. Copper is identified as one of the most important materials deserving of further investigation into potential resource savings through increased recycling. The other factors listed above are accounted for in the modelling technique employed. united Kingdom copper flows are qualitatively and statistically described for the years 1949 - 1976. Less accurate statistics are developed for 1922 - 1948. Adaptive expectations type causal models of total, unalloyed, and alloyed copper demand are successfully construGted and are used to generate future scenarios. Evidence is demonstrated for a break in the historical link between U.K. copper demand and industrial production. Simple causal models of potential copper scrap supply are constructed and a comparison made with actual old scrap withdrawals. Accurate adaptive expectations type models of total scrap demand are developed, but no conclusion is reached about the price elasticity of scrap demand. Various scenarios of copper goods demand are forecast and their effecl on copper scrap demand. The potential to recover up to an extra 100.000 tonnes/year of generally lower grade old scrap is identified. policy options are examined and the following recommendations made: 1) A total investment of up to £67 million in secondary refining capacity by the year 2000 is needed. 2) The copper scrap content of copper bearing goods should be specified to aid recovery. 3) A U.K. copper scrap buffer stock scheme would be advantageous for G~e secondary copper industry. Finally the methodology used is summarised for potential application to other materials.
author Nott, Michael V.
author_facet Nott, Michael V.
author_sort Nott, Michael V.
title The effects of changes in recycling patterns on United Kingdom resource consumption
title_short The effects of changes in recycling patterns on United Kingdom resource consumption
title_full The effects of changes in recycling patterns on United Kingdom resource consumption
title_fullStr The effects of changes in recycling patterns on United Kingdom resource consumption
title_full_unstemmed The effects of changes in recycling patterns on United Kingdom resource consumption
title_sort effects of changes in recycling patterns on united kingdom resource consumption
publisher Aston University
publishDate 1981
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.544589
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