| Literature DB >> 28300094 |
Saleem H Ali1,2,3, Damien Giurco4, Nicholas Arndt5, Edmund Nickless6, Graham Brown7, Alecos Demetriades8, Ray Durrheim9, Maria Amélia Enriquez9, Judith Kinnaird10, Anna Littleboy11, Lawrence D Meinert12, Roland Oberhänsli13, Janet Salem14, Richard Schodde15,16, Gabi Schneider17, Olivier Vidal5, Natalia Yakovleva18.
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 for mineral exploration, environmental practices, and consumer awareness of the effects of consumption. Here we present, through analysis of a comprehensive set of data and demand forecasts, an interdisciplinary perspective on how best to ensure ecologically viable continuity of global mineral supply over the coming decades.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28300094 DOI: 10.1038/nature21359
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962