Circuits of scrap: closed loop industrial ecosystems and the geography of US international recyclable material flows 1995-2005

Authors: LYONS, DONALD1; RICE, MURRAY1; WACHAL, ROBERT1

Source: The Geographical Journal, Volume 175, Number 4, December 2009 , pp. 286-300(15)

Publisher: Blackwell Publishing

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Abstract:

The recycling of scrap material has been identified as an important strategy in the larger theory of industrial ecology. Industrial ecology argues that the traditional model of industrial activity needs to be transformed into a `closed loop' industrial ecosystem where used materials (scrap) and by-products would substitute for virgin materials during production processes. The recycling of scrap material forms part of this larger effort to reduce the overall environmental impact of production and consumption. A key, but as yet, unresolved question in this process is the geographic scale (local, regional, national, global) at which loop closing should take place. This preliminary empirical research examines the export and import geography of the seven largest (by weight) US scrap commodities (iron and steel, paper, plastics, aluminium, copper, nickel and zinc) between 1995 and 2005 to ascertain the extent to which US scrap flows overseas and how that might affect our understanding of how material loops can close. Other than an integrated export and import relationship with Canada, the results suggest that there are two distinct circuits of scrap flows in the USA. The USA exports a substantial portion of the recyclable scrap generated each year to rapidly developing countries, while importing smaller quantities of scrap from the EU. With the major exception of exporting higher value iron and steel scrap to China, the US tends to export lower value scrap and import higher value scrap. In part this reflects imbalances in the supply and demand for scrap between the USA and the developing world, the lack of potentially available scrap and the absence of a robust recycling infrastructure in the developing world. Although such scrap circuits are probably not ideal, the use of US scrap in the developing world is both a realistic and preferable alternative in the short to medium term than virgin production.

Keywords: US international scrap trade; industrial ecology; material cycling; closed loop industrial ecosystems; recycling infrastructure; developing countries

Document Type: Research article

DOI: 10.1111/j.1475-4959.2009.00341.x

Affiliations: 1: Department of Geography, University of North Texas, 1155 Union Circle # 305279, Denton, TX 76203-5017, USA, Email: dlyons@unt.edu

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