Global use of materials is projected to balloon to 170-184 billion tonnes by mid-century, the report said.
The
world is using up more than 100 billion tonnes of natural
resources per year for the first time ever while global recycling
of raw materials has fallen, according to a report released Tuesday.
The
share of minerals, fossil fuels, metals and biomass feeding into the
global
economy that is reused declined in two years from an already
paltry 9.1 percent to 8.6 today, the Circularity Gap Report 2020
found.
"No
country is meeting the basic needs of its citizens while also
operating within the physical boundaries of our planet," said
Marc de Wit, a director at the non-profit Circle Economy and lead
author of the report.
The
resources fuelling the world economy increased more than eight
percent in just two years from 93 billion tonnes in 2015 to 100.6
billion in 2017, the last year for which data is available.
Since
1970, the human population has doubled, the global economy has grown
fourfold, and trade has expanded tenfold, a trajectory that -- in the
absence of widespread recycling -- relentlessly pushes up the demand
for energy and resources.
Global
use of materials is projected to balloon to 170-184 billion tonnes by
mid-century, the report said.
To
improve living standards -- especially in low-income countries --
while also protecting ecosystems that provide clear water, air and
soil, the world must vastly boost the share of recycled natural
resources, the authors said.
Wealthy
nations, the authors note, consume 10 times more resources per person
than in the developing world, and produce far more waste.
Rich
countries must "take responsibility for the impact of their
imports and exports," the report said, noting that much of what
they consume comes from less developed nations, while much of their
waste is exported.
The
report also noted that recycling rates are high in poorer countries,
as waste can "provide a valuable source of revenue for informal
workers." "China, for instance, has pioneered
eco-industrial parks where the waste of one business becomes the
feedstock for another.
No comments:
Post a Comment