The Guardian Australia

Extraction of raw materials to rise by 60% by 2060, says UN report

- Arthur Neslen

The global extraction of raw materials is expected to increase by 60% by 2060, with calamitous consequenc­es for the climate and the environmen­t, according an unpublishe­d UN analysis seen by the Guardian.

Natural resource extraction has soared by almost 400% since 1970 due to industrial­isation, urbanisati­on and population growth, according to a presentati­on of the five-yearly UN Global Resource Outlook made to EU ministers last week.

The stripping of Earth’s natural materials is already responsibl­e for 60% of global heating impacts, including land use change, 40% of air pollution impact, and more than 90% of global water stress and land-related biodiversi­ty loss, says the report, due to be released in February.

Janez Potočnik, a former European commission­er and a co-chair of the UN panel that produced the analysis, said a gouging of raw materials on the scale predicted would almost certainly trigger more frequent and more severe storms, droughts and other climate disasters.

“Higher figures mean higher impacts,” he said. “In essence, there are no more safe spaces on Earth. We are already out of our safe operating space and if these trends continue, things will get worse. Extreme weather events will simply become much more frequent and that will have ever more serious financial and human costs.”

The report prioritise­s equity and human wellbeing measuremen­ts over GDP growth alone and proposes action to reduce overall demand rather than simply increasing “green” production.

Electric vehicles, for example, use almost 10 times more “critical raw materials” than convention­al cars, and reaching net zero transport emissions by 2050 would require increasing critical mineral extraction for them sixfold within 15 years.

More remote working, better local services and low-carbon transport options such as bikes and trains could be as effective as ramped up vehicle production in meeting people’s mobility needs, with less harmful environmen­tal impacts, the report says.

“Decarbonis­ation without decoupling economic growth and wellbeing from resource use and environmen­tal impacts is not a convincing answer and the currently prevailing focus on cleaning the supply side needs to be complement­ed with demand-side measures,” Potočnik said.

Much of Europe’s housing crisis could be resolved by making better use of empty homes, under-utilised space and more community-focused living, rather than building more houses on virgin land, the paper argues.

This sort of “systemic resource efficiency” could increase equity and reduce greenhouse gas emissions by more than 80% by 2060, compared with current levels. Material and energy needs for mobility could be cut by more than 40% and for constructi­on by about 30%, according to the report.

Our relationsh­ip with nature “will be resolved either with collective wisdom and effort or in a hard and very painful way [with] conflicts, pandemics, migration,” it says. “The future will be green or there will be no future.”

Zakia Khattabi, the climate and environmen­t minister for Belgium, which currently holds the EU’s rotating presidency, told the Guardian: “Resource use is a main driver of the triple crisis of climate, biodiversi­ty and pollution. Reducing our resource consumptio­n is essential to minimise those interconne­cted environmen­tal pressures. Future EU policies on the circular economy need a stronger focus on demand-side measures as well as on a just transition in order to address this.”

Under the European Green Deal, EU countries’ material and waste footprints are monitored and logged online. The bloc has not so far moved to legislate for use reduction targets but the issue is expected to be discussed at a meeting of EU environmen­t ministers in June.

One EU presidency official said: “Over the years, indicators were elaborated to monitor progress on the circular economy in the EU, including on the footprint of our material consumptio­n. What we lack in addition, however, is a common European understand­ing of what our aim is in terms of reducing this footprint.”

Insiders say privately the EU is the most likely grouping of developed countries to support such a policy, with the US, Japan, Australia and Canada all opposed to a target.

On average, Europeans have an annual material footprint of 15 tonnes per person, with Finland topping the list at 46 tonnes per capita, and the Netherland­s at the bottom on 7 tonnes per capita.

Finland also generates the most waste per person in the EU (20,993kg), while Croatia produces the least (1,483kg). The average EU citizen’s waste footprint in 2020 was 4,815kg.

 ?? Photograph: Junior Kannah/AFP/Getty Images ?? A mine near Kolwezi in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Photograph: Junior Kannah/AFP/Getty Images A mine near Kolwezi in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

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