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Mineral revolution for the Wellbeing Economy

Authors :
Richard Gloaguen
Saleem H. Ali
Richard Herrington
Leila Ajjabou
Elizabeth Downey
Iain S. Stewart
Source :
Global Sustainability 5(2022), e15
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2022.

Abstract

Non-technical summary. As we consider a transition to a low-carbon future, there is a need to examine the mineral needs for this transformation at a scale reminiscent of the Green Revolution. The efficiency gains of the agrarian transition came at ecological and social costs that should provide important lessons about future metal sourcing. We present three options for a Mineral Revolution: status quo, incremental adaption and revolutionary change. We argue that a sustainable Mineral Revolution requires a paradigm shift that considers wellbeing as a purpose and focuses on preserving natural capital. Technical summary. As we consider a transition to a low-carbon future, there is a need to examine the mineral needs for this transformation at a scale reminiscent of the Green Revolution. The efficiency gains of the agrarian transition came at ecological and social costs that can also provide important lessons about the Mineral Revolution. We lay out some of the key ways in which such a mineral revolution can be delineated over temporal scales in a paradigm shift that considers wellbeing as a purpose and focuses on preserving natural capital. These prospects are conceptually presented as three pathways that consider the status quo, incremental adaption and revolutionary change as a means of planning more effectively for a lowcarbon transition. Social media summary. Sourcing metals sustainably will require to consider wellbeing as a purpose and to preserve natural capital.

Details

ISSN :
20594798
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Global Sustainability
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....213fad46d0f109872a811b77308d5671