Contemporary Resource Policy and Decoupling Trends—Lessons Learnt from Integrated Model-Based Assessments
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- global atmospheric CO2 concentration has increased from around 325 to above 400 ppm [5];
- global average temperature has increased by approximately 0.9 °C [7]; and
- global extraction of raw materials (biomass, fossil fuels, metal ores and non-metallic minerals) has almost quadrupled from around 23 billion tonnes to more than 80 billion tonnes [3].
1.1. International Environmental Policy—Unified in Lack of Quantified Targets on Raw Material Use
1.2. Past Decoupling Trends on Global and National Levels
- China, the UK and the US (where the increases approximate 8 t per capita each);
- Brazil and Japan (around 6 t per capita each);
- Australia and EU-27 (approximately 5 t per capita); and
- Russia (around 3 t per capita) [4].
1.3. A Need for Going beyond Resource Efficiency Oriented Policies?
- 10 t per capita (or a range of 6–12 t per capita) for TMCabiot;
- 2 t per capita for TMCbiot; and
- 5 t per capita (or a range of 3–6 t per capita) for RMC [13].
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Research Question and Study Design
2.2. The Global Dynamic MRIO Model GINFORS3
2.2.1. Why Use a Dynamic Macroeconomic Simulation Model?
- the evolution of societal preferences (such as the diffusion rate of meat and dairy-based diets or the perceived relevance of product ownership for societal status);
- socio-economic structures (such as population levels and structures, labour participation rates, wage–price dynamics and resulting income distribution structures);
- associated infrastructure investment decisions (shaping, inter alia, urbanisation tendencies); and
- and the diffusion of technical progress in multi-national supply chains.
2.2.2. The GINFORS3 Model
- production, basic prices, intermediate demand and value added;
- international supply chains (bilateral trade matrices; the grey circle in Figure 2);
- final demand (consumption expenditures by households and non-profit organisations, government spending and gross fixed capital formation by industries); and
- labour markets (labour demand, wages, (un-)employment).
- used and unused extractions of abiotic resources (non-metallic minerals, metal ores, coal, oil and gas); thereby allowing the calculation of
- sophisticated environmental indicators (such as raw material consumption RMC and raw material input RMI that identify/consider the environmental impacts of domestic activities along the diversified international supply chains);
- demand and supply/production for 13 different crop groups and 3 different livestock categories and the resulting impacts on prices and agricultural land use; and
- water abstraction for 38 national economies and a RoW region.
2.3. Scenario Parameterisations
2.3.1. Exogenous Scenario Parameters—Setting Values for Global Population Growth and World Market Prices for Primary Metal Ores by Exchanging Information with a System Dynamic Model
2.3.2. Parameterising a Climate Active Scenario Baseline
2.3.3. Parameterising Resource Efficiency Improvements for Simulation Experiments
- the relevance of climate policy for resource efficiency improvements and of resource efficiency improvement for relevant climate parameters (CO2 emissions); and
- the potential of the existing dominant resource policy orientation to achieve existing policy goals of relative decoupling as well as scientific calls for absolute decoupling.
3. Results
3.1. Baseline Projection—Potential Impacts of the Climate Active Scenario
3.1.1. Potential Impacts on Global Environmental Indicators and Global GDP
3.1.2. Potential Impacts on Regional Material (RMC per Capita) and CO2 Footprints
3.2. Resource Efficiency Improvements—Potential Impacts of the Simulation Experiments
3.2.1. Potential Impacts on Global Economic and Environmental Indicators
3.2.2. Potential Impacts on Regional and National Material and CO2 Footprints
4. Discussion
4.1. Belief in Progress: Critical Notes on the Prospects for Extensive Autonomous Accelerations in Current Resource Efficiency Trends
4.1.1. It May Be Possible to Achieve Significant Reductions in Global Raw Material Extraction Levels by Improvements in Resource Efficiency
4.1.2. Such Significant Reductions, However, Require Rather Exceptional Accelerations in Global Resource Efficiency Not Witnessed Anywhere in the Past
4.2. Critical Notes on the Orientation and Ambition of Currently Prevailing Environmental Policy Approaches
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
# | Country or Region |
---|---|
1 | Austria |
2 | Belgium |
3 | Cyprus |
4 | Estonia |
5 | Finland |
6 | France |
7 | Germany |
8 | Greece |
9 | Ireland |
10 | Italy |
11 | Luxembourg |
12 | Malta |
13 | Netherlands |
14 | Portugal |
15 | Slovak Republic |
16 | Slovenia |
17 | Spain |
18 | Bulgaria |
19 | Czech Republic |
20 | Denmark |
21 | Hungary |
22 | Latvia |
23 | Lithuania |
24 | Poland |
25 | Romania |
26 | Sweden |
27 | United Kingdom |
28 | Russia |
29 | Turkey |
30 | Brazil |
31 | Canada |
32 | Mexico |
33 | United States |
34 | China |
35 | India |
36 | Japan |
37 | Korea |
38 | Australia |
39 | Rest of World |
Input Category | Affected Industry |
---|---|
Products of agriculture, hunting and related services | Food, Beverages and Tobacco |
Metal ores | Basic Metals and Fabricated Metal |
Basic metals | Transport Equipment |
Other mining and quarrying products | Other Non-Metallic Mineral |
Construction work | Real Estate Activities |
Other mining and quarrying products | Construction |
Basic metals | Machinery, n.e.c. |
Other non-metallic mineral products | Construction |
Basic metals | Electrical and Optical Equipment |
Food products and beverages | Hotels and Restaurants |
Chemicals, chemical products and man-made fibres | Rubber and Plastics |
Construction work | Public Admin and Defence; Compulsory Social Security |
Other mining and quarrying products | Chemicals and Chemical Products |
Products of forestry, logging and related services | Wood and Products of Wood and Cork |
Electrical machinery and apparatus n.e.c. | Construction |
Chemicals, chemical products and man-made fibres | Health and Social Work |
Other mining and quarrying products | Public Admin and Defence; Compulsory Social Security |
Construction work | Health and Social Work |
Electrical machinery and apparatus n.e.c. | Transport Equipment |
Fabricated metal products, except machinery and equipment | Transport Equipment |
Rubber and plastic products | Transport Equipment |
Basic metals | Construction |
Other mining and quarrying products | Agriculture, Hunting, Forestry and Fishing |
Food products and beverages | Health and Social Work |
Electrical machinery and apparatus n.e.c. | Machinery, n.e.c. |
Wood and products of wood and cork (except furniture), articles of straw and plaiting materials | Construction |
Fabricated metal products, except machinery and equipment | Machinery, n.e.c. |
Chemicals, chemical products and man-made fibres | Transport Equipment |
Construction work | Renting of M&Eq and Other Business Activities |
Products of agriculture, hunting and related services | Public Admin and Defence; Compulsory Social Security |
Basic metals | Chemicals and Chemical Products |
Machinery and equipment n.e.c. | Transport Equipment |
Construction work | Electricity, Gas and Water Supply |
Construction work | Other Community, Social and Personal Services |
Other mining and quarrying products | Food, Beverages and Tobacco |
Rubber and plastic products | Construction |
Fabricated metal products, except machinery and equipment | Construction |
Chemicals, chemical products and man-made fibres | Basic Metals and Fabricated Metal |
Other non-metallic mineral products | Transport Equipment |
Food products and beverages | Agriculture, Hunting, Forestry and Fishing |
Products of agriculture, hunting and related services | Hotels and Restaurants |
Products of agriculture, hunting and related services | Health and Social Work |
Products of forestry, logging and related services | Pulp, Paper, Paper, Printing and Publishing |
Construction work | Education |
Chemicals, chemical products and man-made fibres | Construction |
Chemicals, chemical products and man-made fibres | Electrical and Optical Equipment |
Other non-metallic mineral products | Electrical and Optical Equipment |
Wood and products of wood and cork (except furniture), articles of straw and plaiting materials | Manufacturing, n.e.c.; Recycling |
Rubber and plastic products | Machinery, n.e.c. |
Other non-metallic mineral products | Basic Metals and Fabricated Metal |
Chemicals, chemical products and man-made fibres | Agriculture, Hunting, Forestry and Fishing |
Medical, precision and optical instruments, watches and clocks | Health and Social Work |
Electrical machinery and apparatus n.e.c. | Electricity, Gas and Water Supply |
Other mining and quarrying products | Basic Metals and Fabricated Metal |
Chemicals, chemical products and man-made fibres | Pulp, Paper, Paper, Printing and Publishing |
Chemicals, chemical products and man-made fibres | Textiles and Textile Products |
Public administration and defence services, compulsory social security services | Electricity, Gas and Water Supply |
Construction work | Financial Intermediation |
Radio, television and communication equipment and apparatus | Machinery, n.e.c. |
Construction work | Other Supporting and Auxiliary Transport Activities; Activities of Travel Agencies |
Other transport equipment | Public Admin and Defence; Compulsory Social Security |
Chemicals, chemical products and man-made fibres | Machinery, n.e.c. |
Pulp, paper and paper products | Chemicals and Chemical Products |
Fabricated metal products, except machinery and equipment | Electrical and Optical Equipment |
Basic metals | Electricity, Gas and Water Supply |
Construction work | Transport Equipment |
Other transport equipment | Air Transport |
Products of agriculture, hunting and related services | Real Estate Activities |
Other mining and quarrying products | Other Community, Social and Personal Services |
Other non-metallic mineral products | Chemicals and Chemical Products |
Furniture, other manufactured goods n.e.c. | Transport Equipment |
Construction work | Retail Trade, Except of Motor Vehicles and Motorcycles; Repair of Household Goods |
Construction work | Chemicals and Chemical Products |
Pulp, paper and paper products | Food, Beverages and Tobacco |
Construction work | Basic Metals and Fabricated Metal |
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Assumed Global Price Trajectories for Fossil Energy Carriers | 2020 | 2030 | 2040 | 2050 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Coal: OECD Steam Coal Import Price (2013 USD/tonne) | 88 | 78 | 77 | 76 |
Crude Oil: IEA Crude Oil Import Price (2013 USD/bbl) | 105 | 102 | 100 | 98 |
Gas: Europe Import Price (2013 USD/Mbtu) | 10.5 | 10.0 | 9.2 | 9.0 |
Country | 2030 | 2050 |
---|---|---|
Russia | 23.3 | 55.2 |
China | 40.1 | 77.2 |
India | 40.7 | 73.9 |
United States | 34.4 | 71.8 |
Germany | 73.0 | 100.0 |
Country | 2030 | 2050 |
---|---|---|
Russia | 8.6 | 9.6 |
China | 5.7 | 7.4 |
India | 6.4 | 7.5 |
United States | 20.2 | 19.0 |
Germany | 0.0 | 0.0 |
Key Scenario Parameters | Assumed Values of Key Scenario Parameters |
---|---|
ETS certificate price | By 2050, prices in EU-ETS increase to 147 €2010 per tonne of CO2 Introduction of ETS in further countries from 2020 onwards, prices in EU-ETS increase to 152 US$2010 per tonne of CO2 |
Financial support for energy refurbishment in buildings | Additional energy refurbishment of 1.5% of residential building stock from 2016 onwards (Germany); 2021 onwards (further EU member states); 2026 onwards (industrialised non-EU-countries); 2031 onwards (BRIC countries, Mexico and Turkey) |
Petroleum tax | Raising real tax rate on petroleum products in Germany by a factor of 1.5 by 2050; further countries follow with a time lag of 5 years (further EU member states); 10 years (industrialised non-EU countries); 15 years (BRIC countries, Mexico and Turkey) |
Supporting e-mobility, private households | By 2050 the share of e-mobility in individual motor car traffic amounts to 33.3% (Germany); 25% (further EU member states and industrialised non-EU countries); 16.7% (BRIC countries, Mexico and Turkey), 8.3% (RoW) |
Supporting e-mobility, business and industry | By 2050 the share of e-mobility in freight motor car traffic amounts to 16.7% (Germany); 12.5% (further EU member states and industrialised non-EU countries); 8.3% (BRIC countries, Mexico and Turkey); 8.3% (RoW) |
Key Parameters | Parameter Value Assumptions |
---|---|
Number of resource relevant production technologies/sectors in Germany | 75 |
Additional annual efficiency gain per technology/sector in Germany | 2.0% |
Time that producers need to achieve these efficiency improvements in: | |
…other EU countries | 1 year |
…industrialised non-EU countries | 3 years |
…other countries and in RoW region | 5 years |
Initial investments needed (in relation to realised savings) for: | |
…consultancy services | 1 |
…research and development | 1.5 |
…gross fixed capital formation | 2.5 |
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Meyer, M.; Hirschnitz-Garbers, M.; Distelkamp, M. Contemporary Resource Policy and Decoupling Trends—Lessons Learnt from Integrated Model-Based Assessments. Sustainability 2018, 10, 1858. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10061858
Meyer M, Hirschnitz-Garbers M, Distelkamp M. Contemporary Resource Policy and Decoupling Trends—Lessons Learnt from Integrated Model-Based Assessments. Sustainability. 2018; 10(6):1858. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10061858
Chicago/Turabian StyleMeyer, Mark, Martin Hirschnitz-Garbers, and Martin Distelkamp. 2018. "Contemporary Resource Policy and Decoupling Trends—Lessons Learnt from Integrated Model-Based Assessments" Sustainability 10, no. 6: 1858. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10061858
APA StyleMeyer, M., Hirschnitz-Garbers, M., & Distelkamp, M. (2018). Contemporary Resource Policy and Decoupling Trends—Lessons Learnt from Integrated Model-Based Assessments. Sustainability, 10(6), 1858. https://doi.org/10.3390/su10061858