What is the sustainable use of natural resources?

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kevin
The aim of this report is to demonstrate the need to reduce the consumption of natural resources (environmental impacts) in the economy and provide the initial impetus for a new policy to keep the use of natural resources within sustainable limits.
1. Towards a sustainable use of natural resources
Stichting Natuur en Milieu, January 2001
H.Muilerman, H.Blonk.
1 Aim of the report
2 Depletion of natural resources
3 Sustainability of natural resource use
3.1 Environmental impacts of natural resource use
3.2 Ecological limits
3.3 Social and economic sustainability: fair shares
3.4 The challenge facing the Western world
4 Indicators of the pressures on reserves of natural resources
4.1 Type of indicators
4.2 Consumption indicators for the Western world – the Netherlands as example
5 Trends in natural resource use – the Netherlands as example
6 Reduction targets and strategies
7 Policy requirements
8 References
1
2. 1 Aim of the report
The aim of this report is to demonstrate the need to reduce the consumption of natural
resources (environmental impacts) in the economy and provide the initial impetus for a
new policy to keep the use of natural resources within sustainable limits. (By ‘natural
resources’we mean the global reserves of natural resources and raw materials by used
human beings.) Reduction of the use of natural resources in production and consumption is
often referred to as ‘dematerialization’.
2 Depletion of natural resources
Three kinds of reserves of natural resources can be identified (Reijnders 1999, Chapman
1983): continuous resources such as sunlight and wind, the use of which does not lead to a
reduction in their size; renewable resources, such as wood and crops that can be harvested
– but not faster than their rate of replenishment; and non-renewable resources such as fossil
fuels and minerals. The last are created by very slow geological processes, so slow in
human terms that their use diminishes the available stocks. Resources such as clean water,
fertile soils and biodiversity, given the time required for their recovery, can also be
considered to be non-renewable.
The Club of Rome first drew attention to the depletion of resources at the beginning of the
1970s. At that time the emphasis was on the depletion of fossil and mineral resources. It
was assumed that various important natural resources such as oil and various metal ores
would be exhausted within a few decades. In fact, this turned out not to be true.
Discoveries of new deposits, technological advances and falling energy prices have made
possible the recovery of lower grade ores, and the estimated remaining lifetimes of some
resources have been considerably extended.
But this is no reason for complacency. Sooner or later, at the current rate of consumption,
the reserves of certain resources will be exhausted. This may be a long way off for a
number of fossil fuels and mineral ores, but other resources such as biodiversity and fertile
soils are being used up so quickly there is a danger that critical thresholds will be crossed.
The drain on biotic resources is particularly alarming; biodiversity and fertile soils are
being rapidly used up. Research by WWF indicates that the ‘health’of the world
ecosystem, based on measurements of the loss of forest area and freshwater and marine
animal species, has declined by 30% in 25 years (WWF 1998). Half the natural forest
cover worldwide has already disappeared, 13% in the last 30 years. Europe only has 1% of
its original forest cover left. And there is no sign of this attack on biodiversity diminishing.
Decline Expected trend
Health of the world ecosystem -30% in the last 25 years Continuing decline
§ Area of natural forest § -13% in the last 30 years More rapid reduction
§ Freshwater ecosystem index § -50% in the last 25 years
§ Marine ecosystem index § -40% in the last 25 years
Fertile soils -25% in the last 50 years Same or greater reduction
§ Africa § -30%
§ Asia § -27%
§ Latin America § -18%
Table 1: Some trends in the depletion of natural resources WWR, 1999, Anonymous 1999)
2
3. Poverty is an important underlying cause of further deforestation, of which about two-
thirds is carried out by small farmers clearing land for cultivation and to obtain wood for
fuel. Commercial logging for timber is responsible for most of the rest. The pressure on the
remaining forests is increasing as the numbers of people with a low income and worldwide
demand for commercial timber products grow. The demand for food, and therefore for
agricultural land, will also rise sharply as the world’s population rises and people’s diets
contain more protein (Matthews 1999). Almost all the best agricultural land is already
cultivated and so less suitable land is being brought into cultivation, leading to more soil
erosion and loss of biodiversity.
Fertile soil is the basis for agricultural production. In the last 50 years 25% of all fertile
soils have been lost and/or degraded, and intensive efforts will be needed to prevent this
process speeding up. The poorer countries are worst affected, and major problems are
forecast in a number of important food producing areas in third world countries (Pinstrup-
Andersen 1999). Soils recover naturally at an extremely slow rate and the costs of
restoration are so high they are, in effect, unaffordable for these countries.
The growth in biofuels is also increasing the pressure on the reserves of suitable
agricultural land. The National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM) in
the Netherlands has calculated that if a large-scale conversion to biofuels – stimulated by
greenhouse gas policies and the reduced availability of fossil fuels – implies that 20–25%
of all suitable agricultural land will be needed for biofuel crops by 2050 (RIVM 2000a). It
is hardly conceivable that this could happen given the considerable rise in the demand for
land for the production of food.
The worldwide demand for fossil and mineral resources also continues to grow. Global
policies to reduce greenhouse gases may inhibit growth in the use of fossil fuels, but there
is little sign of this (RIVM 2000a). Demand for a number of mineral ores may even be
rising faster than for fossil fuels, and the demand for metals is forecast to double over the
next 50 years. The use of agricultural fertilizers (N, P, K) is rising even faster. Primary
resource use may be checked by closing cycles, but increases in the percentages of
materials recycled are nowhere near high enough to compensate for the growth in demand.
The end result is that the availability of many reserves is declining as the world population
grows and demand for raw materials rises.
3 Sustainability of natural resource use
The exhaustion of reserves is in large part due to the use of raw materials. Of course, there
are other causes; land, for example, is also needed for housing and infrastructure. But the
use of raw materials largely determines the rate of consumption of natural resources. The
extraction and use of natural resources are responsible for environmental problems all over
the world, and the social and economic impacts of their use cannot always be justified. We
now take a closer look at these three aspects of natural resource use.
3.1 Environmental impacts of natural resource use
The use of natural resources can lead to a variety of environmental impacts:
3
4. • Direct impacts of extraction, for example the impacts on nature and the landscape of
opencast mining.
• Disruption of materials cycles by the introduction of previously unavailable matter into
the biosphere (such as carbon, phosphate and heavy metals), or major movements of
materials through the biosphere (e.g. the nutrients N and P), or the loss of natural areas
(loss of fixed C, N and P as a result of deforestation and erosion).
Various other environmental impacts are also associated with the use of natural resources,
such as pesticides used in the production of food and acidification caused by the
combustion of fossil fuels.
The following table gives an indication of the type of environmental impacts resulting
from the use of a number of important groups of natural resources, throughout the whole
chain from extraction to disposal.
Direct impacts of extraction Disturbance to material Other relevant
and distribution cycles environmental impacts
Use of fossil fuels Large local/regional impacts Carbon cycle is greatly Greatest cause of
on the landscape and enlarged (greenhouse effect) acidification, important
ecotoxicological pollution Metal fluxes are increased source of acidifying
(metals are present as compounds in Western
contaminants) countries
Sulphur cycle is enlarged Calamities during extraction
and distribution with large
impacts on nature
Use of mineral reserves Large local/regional impacts The use on non-ferrous Disasters during extraction
on the landscape and metal in particular (e.g. and distribution with large
ecotoxicological pollution copper, zinc, lead and impacts on nature.
cadmium) is responsible for
a steep rise in metal fluxes
Use of wood fibres as fuel Clearance, loss of forest Carbon storage function
and material (forestry) area and loss of biodiversity reduced
in plantations and secondary
forest, soil erosion
Use of agricultural products: Clearance and loss of forest Disruption of nutrient cycles, Ecotoxicological impacts of
food, material and fuel area, loss of soil, reduced carbon storage pesticide use
consumption of groundwater function
reserves Other greenhouse gas
cycles affected
Eutrophication and
acidification due to use of
nutrients or exhaustion due
to use of nutrients
Fisheries Overexploitation and Disruption of nutrient cycles
shrinkage of fish stocks, loss
of biodiversity
Use of water Falling water tables,
salination, exhaustion of
groundwater reserves,
damage to ecosystems
Table 2: Overview of environmental impacts from the use of natural resources
The extraction of fossil fuels and minerals not only causes large local environmental
impacts, but is also associated with regular disasters that have far-reaching impacts.
Examples are the recent disasters in Spain (1998) and Romania/Hungary (1999) and the oil
spills from Russian oilfields (2000). Accidents continue to occur during the transport and
distribution of oil and these can have severe impacts on the marine environment.
4
5. The use of natural resources is the most important human activity in terms of global
environmental effects. Table 3 indicates the relative significance of the use of different
types of natural resources in terms of environmental impacts.
Land use Adverse effects on Greenhouse effect Ecotoxicological
biodiversity from land (incl. fuel impacts
use consumption)
Use of fossil
resources < 1% * ca. 70% ***
Use of minerals
< 1% * 0 (ca. 10%) ***
Use of wood fibre as
fuel and material approx. 32% *** approx. 5% (8%) *
Use of agricultural
products: food, approx. 38% **** approx. 25% (42%) ***
materials and fuel
Fisheries NA *** (< 1%)
Use of water ? ** (< 1%) *
Ecotoxicological impacts relate here to toxic and hazardous substances, acidification and eutrophication.
The greenhouse effect shown in brackets includes the combustion of fossil fuels. About half the total combustion of fossil
fuels, which accounts for about 70% of the total greenhouse effect, is for the direct use of energy. The other half is used in
the production of foods and other products.
* = relatively limited contribution on a global scale; ** moderate contribution globally; *** large contribution globally; ****
very large contribution globally
Table 3: Overview of the significance of environmental impacts caused by the use of
natural resources
Sources: IPPC 1996, WRI, 2000, FAO 2000.
The shaded boxes in Table 3 show the environmental impacts caused largely by use of the
indicated resources.
The production of agricultural raw materials has the greatest environmental impact
worldwide. A great deal of land is needed for agriculture but fertility is diminishing. Large
areas of soils are being lost, mineral use is not in balance with the needs of the crops and
the use of pesticides causes ecological impacts and health effects (in farmers).
3.2 Ecological limits
The environmental impacts of using reserves of natural resources are so great that various
ecological limits are easily exceeded.
Greenhouse effect
According to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPPC) the heightened
greenhouse effect must be reduced by 50–70% from 1990 levels to keep the effects of
climate change within manageable proportions (Watson et al. 2000, RIVM, 2000A).
Signing the 1997 Kyoto protocol was the first step for the industrial countries. But so far
little attempt has been made to achieve a reduction of 50%.1
This reduction target agrees well with the ecological footprint approach, which attempts to provide a picture
of the use of global biological productive capacity. At the moment this is about 30 to 50% higher than that
5
6. At the 1992 ‘Earth Summit’held in Rio de Janeiro (UNCED) it was agreed that current
levels of biodiversity worldwide must be preserved as far as possible. Each country is
responsible for the conservation of its own biodiversity. Nevertheless, the loss of
biodiversity is continuing undiminished, despite a small number of successes (WWF 1998,
RIVM, 2000b).
Various attempts have been made to estimate how large an area of the world’s land area
should be left undisturbed to enable biodiversity to be maintained at present levels (de
Vries 1994). These estimates lie around the 20% mark. At present about 30% of the world
can be considered to be in an undisturbed state. This is not a reassuring figure, though,
because the quality of the areas concerned is of great importance for the conservation of
biodiversity. The increasing demand for land for agriculture, forestry and buildings will
lead to the loss of areas of great value for biodiversity. We cannot conclude, therefore, that
there is room for further uncontrolled exploitation of natural areas.
3.3 Social and economic sustainability: fair shares
Industrialized countries make a much greater claim on raw materials than developing
countries. About 20% of the world’s population lives in rich countries and uses on average
about 50% of the world’s various reserves. Consumption of most resources is increasing
both in rich and poor countries, but faster in poor countries. For example, during the last 10
years fossil fuel consumption in China, with a fifth of the world’s population, has more
than doubled. Meat consumption in China has also doubled in the last 10 years; in 1996 it
stood at 41 kg per person, a little more than half the figure for Europe and a third of the
amount consumed in the US.
Production Use in poor Growth factor at Growth according to forecasts
in poor countries OECD levels of use for total world demand over
countries throughout the the next 50 years
whole world
Fossil resources 1.7 to 2.9 with declining
availability of oil and natural
§ coal, oil and gas PM 52% 3.8 gas (RIVM 2000a)
§ limestone 70% 69% 2.5
Minerals 1.5 to 4 with declining quality
of ores and poor accessibility
§ ferrous 65% 40% 4.8 (Vuuren 1999, Matthews
§ aluminium 60% 30% 5.6 1999)
§ copper 65% 30% 5.6
§ N, P, K nutrients ? 55% 3.6
§ Cars PM 15% 6.8
Wood fibre as fuel and material
PM 67% 2.4 1.6 to 2.6 assuming growth of
§ Firewood 1 to 2% per year with
§ raw materials for industry 90% 90% NA declining area of forest cover
40% 33% 6.8 worldwide and halving of
tropical forests (Matthews
produced naturally by the earth (Wackernagel et al. 2000), made possible by the use of fossil resources. The
annual use of carbon is greater than the earth can fix each year in the form of organic matter. If we decide
that biological productivity may not be higher than that provided naturally by the earth, then the use of fossil
fuels will have to be reduced by about 75%. This assumes that it will be much more difficult to cut back on
agriculture, forestry and housing.
6
7. 1999)
Agricultural products: food,
materials and fuels 1.5 in the next 25 years with a
declining availability of fertile
§ grains 74% 74% 2.1 soils
§ meat 60% 60% 3.2
Table 4: Forecast growth of natural resource use
The third column in Table 4 shows the growth that would take place if the use of resources
was divided equally, based on a population of 9 billion in 2050 and present levels of
consumption in the rich countries (average of OECD countries).
Growth in the consumption of resources in poor countries is an inescapable consequence of
social and economic development, and is progressing on a large scale in a number of
countries. However, it is highly questionable whether growing prosperity in poor countries
can be allowed to be accompanied by a per capita consumption of resources comparable
with that of the rich countries now. If in 2050 the population of the world consumes natural
resources at the levels now enjoyed by the ‘rich countries’of the world, it would consume
2 to 7 times the present amount of natural resources. This would multiply current
environmental problems by 2 to 7 times as well, while the goal is an absolute reduction of
environmental impacts. This is illustrated in Figure 1 for the greenhouse effect.
CO2-emissie: groeifactor 3,8; gewenst 0,5
prognose komende 50 jaar 1,7 - 2,9
500%
400%
300%
200%
100%
0%
Huidige verdeling Gelijke verdeling
rijk arm
Figure 1: The effect of an equal distribution of resource use on the growth in CO2
CO2 emissions: growth factor 3.8; desired 0.5
Prognosis for the next 50 years 1.7–2.9
Current distribution of resource use
Equal distribution of resource use
This presents us with a big challenge: to raise the efficiency of resource use, in some cases
by a factor 10 (90% reduction), and achieving a comparable reduction in environmental
impacts. For the use of fossil fuels, for example, efficiency needs to be increased by a
factor of 7.6 (3.8/0.5).
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8. The tasks facing the industrialized and the developing countries are different, though. The
industrialized countries will indeed have to find ways of considerably reducing their use of
raw materials and natural resources per head of the population. This will require great
changes in the production and consumption of resources. For developing countries, the task
is to generate growth in prosperity using efficient technologies, which are now hard for
them to obtain.
Many natural resources processed or consumed in the rich countries are extracted and
produced in poor countries, generally because of natural circumstances, such as climate
and the presence of mineral ores, and because wages are low. Under prevailing power
structures in these countries the local population usually comes off worst (Spapens 1998).
Pay and working conditions in mines are generally bad, and mining activities often cause
sweeping changes in the environment of the local population. Wages and working
conditions also tend to be poor on plantations owned by multinationals, where many food
crops, such as banana, tea and coffee, are grown.
The current skewed distribution of production and consumption of natural resources results
in resources being taken from poor countries and added to the reserves in the economies of
rich countries. This will enable the rich countries to cope with a future scarcity of primary
resources much better than their poor cousins. For example, rich countries have large
stocks of recoverable metals in products and waste – which makes the high demand for
primary metals from the rich countries highly suspicious.
3.4 The challenge facing the Western world
The Western world faces two challenges concerning the use of natural resources. First, that
of achieving a fair distribution of resource use. Achieving this will require a literal
‘dematerialization’of consumption. About 70% of the greenhouse effect is caused by the
use of fossil resources. Of this 70%, more than half is used in the industrial production of
raw materials, components and products. The potential for reducing the greenhouse effect
by making changes to the energy system is limited by the demand for materials efficiency
in the production of goods. To achieve a 50–75% reduction in the emission of greenhouse
gases will be very difficult without large increases in efficiency of the materials system
(and certainly not cost-effective). The basic position of Dutch policy on the greenhouse
effect is that these problems must not be transferred to biodiversity and food production.
Dematerialization of the use of foodstuffs and wood will help free up land for the biofuel
crops and carbon storage needed to combat global warming This, by the way, must not
compete for land with the growing demand in developing countries for good food and
Contribution to global Main reduction measures
warming
Agriculture 20% Control of emissions from agriculture (N2O and CH4)
Land use changes 14% Resist conversion to agriculture and forestry
Food production 16% Increase greenhouse gas efficiency of the energy system,
dematerialization by preventing waste, substitution, etc.,
resulting in a lower demand in agricultural production
Other products 20% Increasing greenhouse gas efficiency of the energy system,
dematerialization by system substitution, prevention and
reuse
Direct use of energy by 30% Increase greenhouse gas efficiency, reduce demand from
consumers consumers by system substitution and more efficient use
8
9. Table 5: Contributions to global warming (IPPC 1996, Blonk 1992, Spapens 1998, Hekert
Summing up, to reduce the greenhouse effect by a factor of 4 to 10 (75 to 90%) from 1990
levels, as required by policy and for a fair distribution of emission quota, consumption
must be dematerialized. If we assume that half the reduction of the greenhouse effect from
the materials system can be achieved by increasing energy efficiency, the other half will
have to be achieved by increasing the efficiency of the use of the materials themselves.
This means that the demand for primary resources other than fossil resources will have to
be reduced by a factor of 2 to 4 (50 to 75%) from 1990 levels. At the same time this will
reduce the land take by the same proportion, assuming the same levels of productivity.
This extra land can be put to good use for combating global warming and meeting the
rising demand for food and timber products, reducing the pressure to bring more virgin
land into production. The demand for primary resources from agriculture and forestry must
be reduced by a factor of 2 to 4 as well. Given the large contribution to total land use made
by these sectors, this is more significant than for minerals.
The second challenge facing the Western world is to produce raw materials within
acceptable local environmental and social conditions, and in doing so contribute to meeting
global sustainability targets. For the extraction of minerals and fossil resources this means
that local environmental impacts must be minimized and international conventions, for
example on working conditions and child labour, must be respected. Food and timber
production must take global sustainability targets into account, such as reductions in global
warming and the prevention of clear felling, soil erosion and biodiversity loss.
Challenge facing the Environmental impact targets Social and economic targets for
Western world for production production
Reduction in use from
1990 levels
Use of fossil Factor 4–10 Limit local environmental Production within acceptable
resources impacts social and economic conditions
Use of minerals Factor 2–4 in relation Limit local environmental Production within acceptable
to greenhouse effect impacts social and economic conditions
Use of wood fibres as Factor 2–4 in relation No use of timber for primary Production within acceptable
fuel and material to greenhouse effect forests, conservation of social and economic conditions
(forestry) biodiversity, sustainable
forest management
Use of agricultural Factor 2–4 in relation No new agricultural land, Production within acceptable
products: food, to greenhouse effect integrated agriculture, social and economic conditions
materials and fuel organic agriculture
Table 6: Challenge to the Western world in relation to dematerialization and natural
resource use
To help third world countries to achieve sustainable production the Western world should
start by reassessing its imports from these countries. Radical changes are needed in the
market structure. At present most natural resources are bought on world markets without
full knowledge of their origin, let alone how the raw materials are produced. In future, each
supplier of raw materials should be able to justify their production methods.
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10. 4 Indicators of the pressures on reserves of natural resources
4.1 Type of indicators
There are various indicators that can be used to monitor the use of physical resources and
materials. First, of all, there are indicators that represent all the material streams in society,
aggregated in one figure. An example is the TMR, the Total Material Requirement
(Adriaanse 1997), which aggregates the use of resources by society into one score by
adding up all the weights of resources used. This approach has two important
1 The total score is heavily influenced by the large resource streams and movements
of these effectively determine the score, while there is no reason to suppose that
these streams are in fact the determining factors in the total pressure on natural
resources. The use of sand has a completely different impact than the use of copper,
for example. An environmental impact score is needed to indicate this.
2 The total score is a sum of natural resources, the pressure on a number of reserves
and movements of resources. Figures as different as the use of potatoes and the
amount of eroded soil are all added up together. This combination of different units
is highly confusing.
A theoretically more satisfactory approach is to add up all the environmental impacts
caused by the various resource streams. However, this places high demands on the method
and procedure for aggregating environmental impacts and requires much data. The attempt
by Pré (2000) to do this using the LCA method must therefore be viewed as an exploratory
exercise. The LCA method used is not suitable for expressing the most important
environmental impacts caused by the use of resources, such as loss of biodiversity and the
environmental impacts of agriculture. Moreover, the data on the extraction and production
of imported raw materials used in Pré study are very sketchy.2
Another approach is to use ‘key resources’. Instead of looking at the actual extraction of
specific resources such as ores and minerals, this method focuses on the use of reserves of
a few specific resources that are ultimately essential for the functioning of the earth and
human society. These key resources are energy, the use of land and biodiversity. The
ecological footprint method is based on the same thinking. It expresses everything as a
(weighted) land area (the ‘footprint’) and has the advantage of allowing comparisons, for
example between the use of sand and copper, via the claims made on a few key resources.
The disadvantage is that it involves long and difficult calculations and considerable
uncertainty. And the definition of ‘key resources’ is itself a subject for debate. How can the
consumption of energy be defined? And how can the use of biodiversity be calculated (see
for example Blonk 1997)?
A more practical approach is to identify the resources streams that make up a substantial
part of all resources used and the environmental impacts caused by the use of resources.
The Pré study does provide insight into some environmental themes and a number of interesting
conclusions are drawn. One third of the pressure on the environment exerted by consumption in the
Netherlands takes place abroad. The study also shows that the Netherlands is a recipient of environmental
pressures exerted by consumption in the EU region (particularly Germany) because of the country’s
geographical situation and economic structure.
10
11. The WWF takes this approach with its six indicators for consumption (WWF 1998): grain
consumption, marine fish consumption, timber consumption, consumption of ‘drinking’
water, and CO2 emissions. This report draws partly on the issues selected by WWF.
4.2 Consumption indicators for the Western world – the Netherlands as example
Production and consumption activities require different indicators of resource use.
Consumption indicators are designed to reflect developments in consumer demand. The
final use of resources, such as land, fossil fuels and biodiversity, and other environmental
impacts can be obtained by combining these indicators with data on the environmental
efficiency of production (such as energy consumption and emissions from production
processes, materials reuse and losses from the production chain). Production indicators
reflect production activities within a country and are more suitable for monitoring the
environmental efficiency of specific production activities.
The OECD (1999) has developed a number of indicators for monitoring changes in the
sustainability of consumption. This list of indicators, along with the WWF methodology, is
used in this report.
The indicators shown in Table 7 provide a good impression of the use of resources by the
Dutch population.
Contribution to environmental impacts from consumption
Direct indicators Land use Damage to Greenhouse Ecotoxicological impacts
biodiversity effect
Fossil fuels <1% <1%
– total fossil fuels 80% Approx. 65% of acidification
– direct energy consumption for passenger transport 20%
– direct domestic energy consumption 20%
– indirect energy use by consumers 40%
– total wood 56% 15% 10%
– consumption of non-certified tropical hardwoods 15% 3%
– total food 36% 75% 30% Approx. 90% eutrophication
– meat consumption 13% 60% and pesticides
– consumption of dairy products 8%
– consumption of vegetable oils 10% 15%
Metals <1% 5% Heavy metal emissions and
– use of steel accumulation
– use of aluminium
– use of zinc
– use of copper
Indirect indicators Indicates:
– household waste Use of articles with a short life
– building and demolition waste Loss of materials due to changes in the housing stock
Table 7: Indicators for Dutch consumption and contribution to environmental impacts
(Vringer 2000, Blonk 1992, Ros 2000, De Vries 1994, Blonk 1992)
Important criteria for the choice of indicators are:
• Contribution to the environmental impacts of Dutch consumption
• Provides insight into the losses (‘leaks’) from the production–consumption chain
• Availability of data
Direct indicators
11
12. The material categories – fossil fuels, firewood, food – make a very high contribution to
environmental impacts in the Netherlands. At the moment, Statistics Netherlands (CBS)
and RIVM monitor these directly in only a limited way. With a few calculations, good
consumption figures can be derived from the statistics (Vringer 2000, Koster, 2000,
Kramer 2000). The use of metals is a good indicator of losses from consumption, derived
from net primary use after consumption (Blonk 1992, Spapens 1998). The use of zinc and
copper leads to an increase in the use and emissions of cadmium because this is a by-
product of their extraction.
Indirect indicators
Both the amount of household waste and residual building and demolition waste are
monitored. Trends in the amount of household waste (or packaging waste) produced says
much about changes in the use of products with a short life, and the composition of
household waste also provides an insight into the use of metals. The amount of residual
building and demolition waste is a global indicator of the materials efficiency of changes in
the housing stock.
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13. 5 Trends in natural resource use – the Netherlands as example
To gain an impression of the changes and environmental impacts of resource use in the
Netherlands we must first identify three trends:
• Volume changes in the consumption of goods in the Netherlands
• Environmental efficiency of Dutch production
• Environmental efficiency of Dutch imports and other sustainability aspects
Volume changes
During the last 10 years the consumption of most natural resources has risen (Figure 2)
Consumption of natural resources in the Netherlands
1985/1988 1995/1998
160%
140%
120%
100%
80%
60%
40%
20%
0%
fos en en en vle zu ho me afg res
sie erg erg erg es ive ut taa ed ter
le ie ie ie l l an en
bra pe in ind kt dB
nd rs. hu ire HH &S
sto ve is ct afv
f rvo al afv
er al
Figure 2: Changes in a number of consumption indicators of resource use (RIVM 2000a,
Spapens 1998, Vringer 2000)
Fossil fuels
direct energy consumption for passenger transport
domestic energy consumption
indirect energy consumption
dairy products
household waste
residual building and demolition waste
Only the material efficiency of the processing of building and demolition wastes has
improved significantly. All other consumption indicators have risen. The use of fossil fuels
for consumption – for which the highest reduction targets, a factor of 4–10, have been set –
has been rising for years. The proportion of energy used indirectly in the production of
food and goods and the treatment of household wastes is gradually becoming more
13
14. significant in the overall picture (Figure 3). Dematerialization will play an important role
in reducing this direct and indirect consumption of energy.
Growth in direct and indirect energy use by households
120.0
100.0
GJ/person per year
80.0
60.0
40.0
20.0
0.0
1948
1951
1954
1957
1960
1963
1966
1969
1972
1975
1978
1981
1984
1987
1990
1993
1996
Direct totaal
Figure 3: Growth in direct and indirect energy use by households (Vringer 2000)
Environmental efficiency of production in the Netherlands
Some progress has been made in improving the environmental efficiency of material
production and use in the Netherlands. Important gains have been made in the area of
ecotoxicological impact through reductions in the emissions of acidic substances from fuel
combustion and emissions of metals and other toxic substances. In a number of areas
results have been disappointing. Emissions of CO2 per unit of energy are hardly falling at
all; and while Dutch agriculture is getting cleaner, emissions of pesticides and nutrients are
falling very slowly.
Environmental efficiency of production abroad
The demand for foreign resources for Dutch consumption has risen, although some
progress has been made and resource use is rising less rapidly than demand. The efficiency
of converting feed into meat has risen and the reuse of certain materials has increased.
Another positive development is the demand from retail organizations to be informed of
the conditions under which food crops are produced. In 2001 European producers will be
obliged to provide this information, launching a process that has potential to strengthen the
role of environmental and social aspects in production and consumption.
In general, though, the trends are still the wrong way, reflecting continuing growth in
consumption. The improvements in environmental efficiency per unit of production are
mainly being made within the Netherlands. The environmental efficiency and the social
and economic conditions of foreign production for consumption in the Netherlands – of
great significance for timber, meat and metals production – have hardly improved at all.
6 Reduction targets and strategies
14
15. The challenge facing the Western world is to cut fossil fuel consumption by a factor of 4 to
10 and reduce the greenhouse effect, land take and consumption of other resources by a
factor of 2 to 4. This challenge goes much further than the automatic process of improving
material and energy efficiency in the production of materials and products. Fundamental
changes are needed, such as
• Bringing materials use in line with functional use
• Limiting wastage of materials and energy in production and consumption chains
• Making better use of resources in the economy (recycling and cascading)
• Developing new products and services
• Using alternative raw materials and resources
Half of the consumer use of fossil fuels is for passenger transport and domestic activities.
Current technologies allow great savings to be made here. ‘Zero-energy’houses are a
possibility, in which gas consumption is a tenth to a twentieth of the amount used in
existing homes. It is also possible using current technologies to reduce the fuel
consumption of cars by a factor of 4 (Weiszacker 1997). The introduction of these
technologies is progressing more slowly than hoped, partly because existing products have
a long life and so replacing and adapting them will take a long time.
The indirect use of fossil fuels for the production and waste treatment of products accounts
for about half of the total use of fossil fuels by consumers. Food consumption takes up
almost half of this. Food is lost throughout the whole chain (UNEP, RIVM), not only from
spoilage during the various production phases and consumption, but also because of
wasteful diets with too much protein and calorific content and an unnecessarily high
proportion of meat. Reduction in the use of fossil fuels in food production by a factor of 4
seems to be technically feasible (Carlston 1998). The same reduction in energy
consumption (to a quarter) is also the target for wood products and metals. To achieve this,
considerably more material will have to be recycled and some processes will have to be
replaced by others.
Technical feasibility is probably not the biggest problem. Much more important in the long
run is how to make these changes in a society with growing levels of consumption and a
strong international orientation.
7 Policy requirements
SNM believes it is high time we made a start with reducing our consumption of natural
resources. We need to take direct action in response to the alarming signs of the damage
being done to the biosphere. The rich and technologically advanced countries have a
responsibility for global problems, and the countries of the European Union should take
lead by example. A policy to substantially reduce resource use should include a number of
• Communication and awareness raising
The threats to the biosphere do not get the attention they deserve from companies or
consumers. The Government should prepare a policy document setting out a course of
action, backed up by a clear analysis. This SNM report is intended to start the ball rolling.
15
16. We argue that considerable changes are needed in Dutch consumption patterns and in the
production of imported raw materials. A communication strategy aimed at companies and
consumers should be drawn up and implemented.
• Objectives
The government should formulate indicative long-term and short-term objectives for
various resources and reserves (space) for reducing the environmental impact of
consumption. The European Union must translate the challenge facing the Western world –
the literal dematerialization of material and resource use and achieving sustainable
production of raw materials – into definable objectives. Ensuring, of course, that
production respects the limits imposed by the environment.
Reduction targets for the Netherlands (from Reduction of environmental impacts from
1990 levels) production
Use of fossil resources Factor 4–10 Limit local environmental impacts
Use of mineral resources Factor 2-4 for greenhouse effect Limit local environmental impacts
Use of wood fibres as fuel Factor 2-4 for greenhouse effect and land No use of timber from primary forest,
and material (forestry) take conservation of biodiversity
Use of agricultural products: Factor 2-4 for greenhouse effect and land No new agricultural land; integrated agriculture,
food, material and fuel take organic agriculture
Table 8: Goals for reducing resource use
These targets will have to be further specified for the most important resource streams.
SNM proposes that specific targets for the 16 ‘indicator’resource streams shown in Table
5 are derived and adopted as policy targets.
• Strategy and action plan
SNM argues for making ‘products’the central target of policies for reducing resource use.
An approach based on the production chain can ensure that all companies will be involved
in reducing the use of resources. Products are also the most relevant point of entry for
policies aimed at consumers too.
Putting ‘products’at the heart of the approach also places the responsibility for
implementing policies for reducing resource use with companies, at least as far as changes
to products or services are involved. To avoid a ‘rebound’effect, government will have to
influence consumer behaviour through market mechanisms, confronting consumers with
the costs of environmental impacts via the prices they pay for products. Government
strategy should distinguish between ‘pioneer companies’, which can be stimulated to
reduce their use of resources (through market mechanisms, experiments, pilot projects,
etc.), and the rest. Regulations are needed to stir most companies into action, with
government setting product standards (e.g. via an independent ‘product bureau’) which
should eventually enable policy targets to be reached. This will take off more quickly if the
costs of the burden on the environment is reflected in the price of raw materials and
products. The same goes for other necessary legislative measures, such as environmental
liability and the right of return.
• Monitoring
Monitoring resource use at the consumption level is highly important. The data obtained
are not only needed to convince parties of the necessity of the policy and the targets, but
also to manage policy and determine whether the objectives have been achieved. SNM
16
17. proposes to start monitoring immediately using the 16 indicators in Table 7 and to publish
these each year.
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