A Systematic Literature Review of Existing Methods and Tools for the Criticality Assessment of Raw Materials: A Focus on the Relations between the Concepts of Criticality and Environmental Sustainability
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- Criticality dimensions (CDs): elements whose values are regarded as directly influencing the value of criticality (e.g., higher unavailability risk contributes to a higher criticality).
- Criticality sub-dimensions: elements that are considered as directly impacting on the value of a CD, but that are themselves composed of other parameters (e.g., higher risks that mining activities of a certain material will be closed due to its environmental impacts increases the unavailability risk of that material).
- Parameters: elements that are considered as directly influencing the value of CDs or criticality sub-dimensions, and that are not stem from computation or the combination of further elements (e.g., higher values for the environmental impacts stemming from mining activities increase the risk that these mining activities will be stopped).
2. Materials and Methods
- Source of the work.
- Year of publication and eventual year of update of the tool or methodology.
- Typology of document (e.g., journal paper, book chapter, or official report).
- Criticality scope: the space the analyzed artifact was conceived to be applied in. Four main scopes are identified, namely (i) global level, assessing criticality of CRMs for the entire world; (ii) country level, assessing criticality for a given country or region; (iii) company level, assessing criticality for a single company; and (iv) product level, assessing the criticality of the materials used for a specific product and thus indirectly assessing the criticality of that product. Here, it was also considered whether the analyzed artifacts were conceived for a specific industry or sector.
- Considered criticality dimensions: this analysis dimension refers to CDs considered by the artifact for the criticality quantification. This is also relevant from a theoretical angle. Indeed, the CDs depend on the idea of criticality that has been, often implicitly, adopted for building the artifact.
- Artifact output: this analysis dimension refers to the shape of the final output of artifact application (e.g., a synthetic criticality indicator, a set of multi-metric indicators, or a two- or three-axes diagram).
- Criticality criteria: this analysis dimension refers to the criteria adopted by the artifacts to define if a material is either critical or non-critical.
- The consideration of environmental impacts: this analysis dimension refers to the inclusion of the environmental impacts and of the concept of environmental sustainability in the criticality assessment. Furthermore, the terms and modalities in which environmental impacts are considered are analyzed, determining what makes a material more critical.
- The consideration of circularity aspects: the circularity aspects refer to the considerations related to the presence of processes and practices related to circular economy (namely, recycling, remanufacturing, refurbishment, repairing, and reusage) for the assessed materials or components. It is evaluated whether these aspects are considered in the criticality assessment and, if so, in what terms they are.
3. Results
3.1. Analysis of Criticality Scope, Criticality Dimensions and Shape of the Artifacts
- Unavailability risk, found as a CD in 102 artifacts. This refers to measuring the risk that the considered material would not be available in the right quantity or at the right time. Under the umbrella term of unavailability risk that has been placed on different CDs, it includes, among the others, supply risk, substitutability, price fluctuation, and ratio between forecasted demand and forecasted available resources. In those cases where the artifact considered two or more of these dimensions as two or more separate CDs, they have been merged here under the label of unavailability risk.
- Economic impacts, counted 42 times. This is a CD referring to the economic consequences of the absence of the assessed materials and thus to the economic dependence on them. Its nature may change from one work to the other, mainly according to the considered criticality scope.
- Environmental impacts: Under this label, the impacts on the environment that have occurred due to the extraction, working, transportation, usage, and disposal of the assessed material are considered. Environmental impacts were counted 20 times in the analyzed artifacts as a main CD.
- Social impacts were counted seven times. Here, the evaluation of the impacts on people’s health and wellbeing related to the extraction, working, transportation, usage, and disposal of the assessed material were included.
3.2. Environmental Sustainability Aspects in Criticality Assessment
- As a parameter or sub-dimension of unavailability risk: in 50 artifacts, the presence and quantification (mostly in terms of the quantity of the involved materials) of circularity practices was considered directly or indirectly as a parameter or sub-dimension influencing the unavailability CD. Indeed, the availability of further sources of materials or components, like those coming from recycling, repairing, or remanufacturing, will automatically decrease the risk that those materials will not be available when needed.
- As a CD: in five cases, circularity practices were given a more relevant role in the assessment, by covering the role of a CD, considering not only the consequences in terms of unavailability risk reduction, but also in terms of environmental impact reduction.
- As a parameter of social sustainability: in one case [47], circularity practices are viewed as positively impacting on the social sustainability associated with CRMs’ life cycle (as they are typically a more socially sustainable alternative to mining activities).
- As a parameter of environmental impacts: in one case, it was considered as a parameter of the environmental impact CD, by quantifying the energy saved through recycling practices [44].
4. Discussion
- The considered criticality scope: different scopes embed different perspectives on criticality and thus different CDs to be considered.
- The consideration of a specific industry: the concept of criticality is defined in different ways in different sectors, which translates to the consideration of different CDs.
- The objective of the artifact: If the objective of the artifact is simple in its application and presents results that are immediately understood, then it would be reasonable to use conceptually simple CDs, composed in a mathematically simple manner. In other cases, CDs may be conceptually more complex (e.g., [15]) and their computation mathematically less simple.
- Authors’ opinions and ideas: since a univocal universally accepted concept of criticality is missing, different authors decide to include or exclude certain CDs in their assessment artifacts.
5. Conclusions and Future Research
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Criticality Scope | Number of Artifacts with That Scope |
---|---|
Company level | 7 |
Country level | 53 |
Global level | 29 |
Product level | 6 |
Flexible scope | 5 |
Undefined | 1 |
Specific for an industrial sector | 32, of which 24 focused on energy sector. The other considered industries were automotive (five artifacts), the production of spintronic memories (one case), and recycling of LED components (one case). In one case the artifact was specific for both the e-mobility and Renewable Energy Sources sectors. |
Criticality Dimension | Number of Artifacts in Which It Was Found | Description | Sub-Dimensions or Parameters Composing It |
---|---|---|---|
Demand growth | 1 | Forecasted increase in demand for that specific material. | None |
Thermodynamic rarity | 1 | Amount of exergy needed to obtain a given material from a completely degraded state [15]. | None |
Market stability | 1 | Robustness of the mineral to sudden market changes by quantifying its price volatility [16]. | Mineral’s price |
Recycling barriers | 1 | Main barriers encountered when recycling metals, displayed in a qualitative manner. | None |
Recyclability Index | 2 | Recycling potential of the considered material in the considered product. | In [17], (i) the statistical entropy of the material in the product, (ii) material grading, and (iii) the total number of materials are considered.In [18], it is qualitative. |
Technology Index | 1 | Availability of technologies to be used to recover CRMs from LED lamps and their related environmental impacts. | They are (i) technology availability, (ii) environmental impacts, (iii) mechanical processing costs, and (iv) metallurgical processing costs. |
Strategic relevance for the country | 2 | Necessity of the material in sectors strategic for the considered country. | None |
internal availability | 1 | Quantity of materials available for mining in the considered country. | None |
Risk for strategic employment | 1 | Relevance of that material for national industries in terms of the employment it provides. | None |
Relevance for future technologies | 1 | Relevance of that material for technologies forecasted to be strategic for the future of the industries in the considered country. | None |
Reputation risks | 1 | Eventual negative influence on corporate reputation coming from usage of that material. | The parameters are (i) the environmental impact of raw materials; (ii) Human Development Index; (iii) regulations with respect to conflict materials |
Material risk indicator | 1 | Risks related to material itself and not to how it is supplied. | The parameters are (i) the lack of substitutability, (ii) global consumption levels, (iii) global warming potential, and (iv) total material requirement. |
Resource Index | 1 | CD related to the economic convenience of recycling certain CRMs. | The considered parameters are (i) economic impacts, (ii) supply risk, (iii) metal value. |
Material risk | 1 | Risks related to material itself and not to how it is supplied. | The considered parameters are (i) substitutability, (ii) strategic relevance for the country, (iii) environmental impacts, (iv) global consumption levels, (v) global warming potential from extraction and production, (vi) total material requirement for extraction and production, and (vii) price. |
Thermal resistance | 1 | Technical parameter related to the functionality of the alloy | None |
Role of Environmental Impact | Number of Occurrences | Description of the Role |
---|---|---|
As a main criticality dimensions | 19 | In these cases, environmental impacts were considered as one of the main dimensions making a material critical |
As a parameter of social acceptance | 4 | Here, environmental impacts were considered only for the impacts they may have on public opinion. Here, social acceptance and the related risks were considered as a main CD or sub-dimension. In one artifact, environmental impacts were both a component of social acceptability and a main CD |
As a parameter of unavailability risk | 5 | In these artifacts, environmental impacts were considered as a parameter of the unavailability risk CD. Here, environmental impacts were moreover considered under the label environmental country risk, i.e., the risk that mining activities are banned from a certain countries due to their environmental impacts. |
As a sub-dimension of sustainability impact | 1 | In a single case, environmental impacts were considered as a sub-dimension of an index, called sustainability impact, in which both social and environmental indicators are embedded [19] |
As a parameter of technology index | 1 | In one artifact, environmental impacts were one of the four parameters defining the technology index CD [17]. |
As a parameter of material risk | 1 | In this case, environmental impacts are considered as a parameter of a CD named material risk [20]. |
As a parameter of material risk | 1 | In [21], environmental impacts are a parameter of the CD material risk together with consumption level, substitutability, and total material requirement. |
As a parameter of economic impacts | 1 | In one artifact, environmental impacts were considered as a parameter of the economic impacts CD. |
Indirectly considered | 1 | In one case, the artifact proposed to assess materials criticality was conceived to be used complementarily with LCA methodology [21]. Therefore, it can be stated that in this case the artifact considers environmental impacts indirectly. |
Artifact Output | Description | Number of Artifacts in Which It Was Found |
---|---|---|
Synthetic indicator | A single synthetic indicator that attempts to quantify criticality. | 38 |
Multi-metrics indicators | A bunch of different indicators not merged in a synthetic criticality proxy. | 25 |
Two-axes matrix | Parameters are summarized in two CDs and the final output is a plotting of the materials in a two-axes matrix. | 23 |
Disaggregated | The CDs to be analyzed and assessed to define material criticality are just presented, and no further indications about the construction of precise indicators were provided. | 14 |
Three-axis matrix | Parameters determining criticality are summarized in three CDs and the final output is a 3-axes matrix where materials are plotted. | 5 |
Framework | An entire elaborated framework. | 2 |
Demand–supply chart | A demand–supply chart where present and forecasted demand and supply of CRMs are drawn. | 1 |
Clustering diagram | A Venn diagram to cluster the materials into different groups. | 1 |
Sankey diagram | A Sankey diagram quantifying material flows. | 1 |
Network analysis | A network diagram of the considered industry chain, to identify the most central and thus critical actors along it. | 1 |
Yes/No indicators | A series of binary answers (yes or no) to a series of questions. | 1 |
Qualitative | Materials are clustered according in a qualitative way according to the authors’ opinion. | 1 |
Criterion | Description | Number of Artifacts in Which It Was Found |
---|---|---|
Threshold | A threshold for the values that the quantified indicator or indicators is set. If a material obtains values for those indicators above or below these thresholds, it is deemed as critical. | 6 |
Benchmarking | A benchmark between the different scores obtained by the assessed materials is carried out. In this case, materials are not classified as either critical or non-critical, but criticality is evaluated in a relative comparison among the marks obtained by the materials. | 55 |
Left to interpretation | A precise mechanism or criterion to assess if a material is either critical or not is not present. | 20 |
Clustering | In some cases, materials are plotted on a chart or on a graph, and clustered. If they belong to a certain cluster or clusters, they are deemed as critical. In other cases, the materials are inserted in a table or in a scheme, and clustered in groups, according to their criticality. | 27 |
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Perossa, D.; Rosa, P.; Terzi, S. A Systematic Literature Review of Existing Methods and Tools for the Criticality Assessment of Raw Materials: A Focus on the Relations between the Concepts of Criticality and Environmental Sustainability. Resources 2024, 13, 131. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources13090131
Perossa D, Rosa P, Terzi S. A Systematic Literature Review of Existing Methods and Tools for the Criticality Assessment of Raw Materials: A Focus on the Relations between the Concepts of Criticality and Environmental Sustainability. Resources. 2024; 13(9):131. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources13090131
Chicago/Turabian StylePerossa, Daniele, Paolo Rosa, and Sergio Terzi. 2024. "A Systematic Literature Review of Existing Methods and Tools for the Criticality Assessment of Raw Materials: A Focus on the Relations between the Concepts of Criticality and Environmental Sustainability" Resources 13, no. 9: 131. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources13090131
APA StylePerossa, D., Rosa, P., & Terzi, S. (2024). A Systematic Literature Review of Existing Methods and Tools for the Criticality Assessment of Raw Materials: A Focus on the Relations between the Concepts of Criticality and Environmental Sustainability. Resources, 13(9), 131. https://doi.org/10.3390/resources13090131