| Literature DB >> 24436632 |
Sylvia Gierlinger, Fridolin Krausmann.
Abstract
The United States is not only the world's largest economy, but it is also one of the world's largest consumers of natural resources. The country, which is inhabited by some 5% of the world's population, uses roughly one-fifth of the global primary energy supply and 15% of all extracted materials. This article explores long-term trends and patterns of material use in the United States. Based on a material flow account (MFA) that is fully consistent with current standards of economy-wide MFAs and covers domestic extraction, imports, and exports of materials for a 135-year period, we investigated the evolution of the U.S. industrial metabolism. This process was characterized by an 18-fold increase in material consumption, a multiplication of material use per capita, and a shift from renewable biomass toward mineral and fossil resources. In spite of considerable improvements in material intensity, no dematerialization has happened so far; in contrast to other high-income countries, material use has not stabilized since the 1970s, but has continued to grow. This article compares patterns and trends of material use in the United States with those in Japan and the United Kingdom and discusses the factors underlying the disproportionately high level of U.S. per capita resource consumption.Entities:
Keywords: dematerialization; industrial ecology; material flow accounting; material flow analysis (MFA); resource productivity; societal metabolism
Year: 2012 PMID: 24436632 PMCID: PMC3886303 DOI: 10.1111/j.1530-9290.2011.00404.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Ind Ecol ISSN: 1088-1980 Impact factor: 6.946
Figure 1Material flows in the United States in gigatons/year (Gt/yr), 1870–2005: (a) domestic extraction of raw materials, (b) domestic material consumption, (c) imports, and (d) exports of raw materials and semimanufactured products. The segments in the graphs follow a bottom to top order of biomass, fossil energy carriers, ores, non metallic minerals.
Average annual U.S. growth rates of population, gross domestic product (GDP), and resource use during different periods of the metabolic transition and factor growth between 1870 and 2005 levels
| Population | 1.9% | 1.3% | 1.0% | 7.5 |
| GDP, in intl. $ | 3.7% | 4.4% | 3.1% | 91.6 |
| DMC, in kg | 2.8% | 3.3% | 1.5% | 19.0 |
| TPES, in J | 4.1% | 3.3% | 0.8% | 36.5 |
| Income (GDP per capita), in intl. $/cap/yr | 1.7% | 3.0% | 2.0% | 12.2 |
| DMC, in t/cap/yr | 0.8% | 2.0% | 0.4% | 2.5 |
| DMC minerals and fossils, in t/cap/yr | 3.3% | 3.2% | 0.7% | 13.4 |
| TPES, in GJ/cap/yr | 2.1% | 2.0% | −0.3% | 4.9 |
Note: 1870–1929: coal phase of the metabolic transition; 1932–1973: oil-based growth; 1984–2005: consolidation of industrial metabolism. We do not show average growth rates for the years after the Great Depression (1929–1932) or the years after the first two oil price shocks (1974–1983), which were characterized by strong fluctuations in material and energy use.
Sources:U.S. Bureau of the Census (1975), FAO (2009) (population); Maddison (2008) (GDP); all other data: own calculations based on MFA database. intl. $= international dollars; kg = kilograms; J = joules; DMC = domestic material consumption; TPES = total primary energy supply; intl. $/cap/yr = international dollars per capita per year; t/cap/yr = tonnes per capita per year; GJ/cap/yr = gigajoules per capita per year.
Figure 2(a) Domestic material consumption (DMC) of fossil energy carriers in the U.S. in gigatons per year (Gt/yr) and (b) U.S. DMC by share of total fossil energy carrier.
Figure 3(a) Physical trade balance (PTB) of the U.S. in tonnes per capita per year (t/cap/yr) and (b) U.S. metabolic rates (material use [domestic material consumption (DMC)] and energy use [total primary energy supply (TPES)] per capita per year). PTB is calculated as physical imports minus exports. Negative values designate net exports.
Figure 4Material use and economic development in the United States: (a) development of population, gross domestic product (GDP), domestic material consumption (DMC), and total primary energy supply (TPES); and (b) material intensity (MI) in kilograms per unit GDP. MI is defined as DMC/GDP. Note the logarithmic scale in Figure 4a. Sources:U.S. Bureau of the Census (1975), FAO (2009) (population); Maddison (2008) (GDP); all other data: own calculation based on MFA database.
Figure 5(a) Domestic material consumption (DMC) in tonnes per capita per year (t/cap/yr) in the United States, United Kingdom, and Japan for 1880; and (b) for 2005. Sources: Based on Schandl and Schulz (2002), Eurostat (2007), and Krausmann et al. (2011).
Drivers of resource use in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Japan. Data for 2005, except when otherwise noted
| Population density | cap/km2 | 32 | 249 | 351 |
| Income (GDP/cap) (const. 2005 $) | $/cap/yr | 37,702 | 27,754 | 38,972 |
| Household final consumption expenditures | $/cap/yr | 26,757 | 18,626 | 21,817 |
| Livestock | cattle/1,000 inh. | 315 | 178 | 35 |
| Meat consumption | kg/cap/yr | 124 | 87 | 47 |
| Motorization | MV/1,000 inh. | 820 | 478 | 562 |
| Pump price of gasoline (2000) | US$/L | 0.5 | 1.2 | 1.1 |
| Passenger road transport | 1,000 pkm/cap/yr | 26 | 12 | 7 |
| Electricity consumption | MWh/cap/yr | 14.6 | 6.8 | 8.7 |
| Residential electricity consumption | MWh/cap/yr | 4.5 | 1.9 | 2.6 |
Note: Sources:World Bank Group (2010) (road transport, income, household final expenditure, gasoline price), IEA (2007) (electricity), FAO (2009) (cattle, meat consumption), Mitchell (2003) and RITA (2010) (motorization).
cap/km2= individuals per square kilometer; GDP/cap = gross domestic product per capita; const. 2005 $= constant 2005 dollars; $/cap/yr = dollars per capita per year; cattle/1,000 inh. = cattle per 1,000 inhabitants; kg/cap/yr = kilograms per capita per year; MV/1000 inh. = motor vehicless per 1,000 inhabitants; US$/L = U.S. dollars per liter; pkm/cap/yr = passenger kilometers per year; MWh/cap/yr = megawatt hours per capita per year.