Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 37 OF 51

Main Title Non-Renewable Resource Issues Geoscientific and Societal Challenges / [electronic resource] :
Type EBOOK
Author Sinding-Larsen, Richard.
Other Authors
Author Title of a Work
Wellmer, Friedrich-W.
Publisher Springer Netherlands,
Year Published 2012
Call Number QE1-996.5
ISBN 9789048186792
Subjects Geography ; Geology ; Physical geography ; Ecology
Internet Access
Description Access URL
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-8679-2
Collation XVIII, 252p. 75 illus., 61 illus. in color. online resource.
Notes
Due to license restrictions, this resource is available to EPA employees and authorized contractors only
Contents Notes
The exhaustion of mineral resources -- A truism or a state of mind?- Stretching the availability of non-renewable resources -- Challenges in the optimal management of remaining petroleum resources -- Uranium: The world's energy mineral.- Coal: an energy source for future world needs!?- Natural gas hydrates: Recent research and assessment developments -- Challenges of the European Mining Industry in the Years to Come.- Commision Raw Materials Initiative -- The metal market: A new corporate landscape emerging -- Developments and trends in the availability of non-ferrous mineral raw materials.- Future of metal mining in Europe - a fennoscandian perspective -- Tomorrow's gold resources: Where will we find them?- Global assessment of undiscovered mineral resources: Opportunities and challenges -- Marine minerals: A new perspective -- Ocean floor mining -- Rare earth elements: a new scope of mining for saving energy and environment -- Metals for a sustainable modern society. All the solid fuels fossil energy and mineral commodities we use come out of the Earth. Modern society is increasingly dependent on mineral and fossil energy sources. They differ in availability, cost of production, and geographical distribution. Even if solid fuels, fossil energy resources and mineral commodities are non-renewable, the extracted metals can to a large extent be recycled and used again and again. Although the stock of these secondary resources and their use increases, the world still needs and will continue to need primary mineral resources for the foreseeable future. Growing demands have begun to restrict availability of these resources. The Earth is not running out of critical mineral resources - at least for the near future - but the ability to explore and extract these resources is being restricted in many regions by competing land use, as well as political and environmental issues. Extraction of natural resources requires a clear focus on sustainable development, involving economic, environmental and socio-cultural aspects. Although we do not know what the most important resources will be in 100 years from now, we can be quite certain that society will still need energy and a wide range of raw materials. These resources will include oil and gas, coal, uranium, thorium, geothermal, metallic minerals, industrial and specialty minerals, including cement, raw materials, rare-earth elements. A global approach for assessing the magnitude and future availability of these resources is called for - an approach that, with appropriate international collaboration, was started within the triennium of the International Year of Planet Earth. Some global mineral resource assessments, involving inter-governmental collaboration, have already been initiated. The International Year of Planet Earth helped to focus attention on how the geosciences can generate prosperity locally and globally, as well as sustainability issues in both developed and developing countries.