
Materials
Efficiency Introduction
Industrialized societys voracious consumption of virgin and synthetic material
resources such as timber, minerals, metals, plastics, glass, and concrete increasingly
depletes our ecosystems natural capital and produces enormous amounts of waste and
pollution. Residents of the industrialized world comprise only 20 percent of the
worlds population, yet consume 86 percent of the worlds aluminum, 81 percent
of its paper, 80 percent of its iron and steel, and 76 percent of its timber (Source: The
Next Efficiency Revolution: Creating a Sustainable Materials Economy, Worldwatch
Institute, 1994).
Using our material resources much more efficiently to prevent resource depletion,
waste, and pollution is a critical component of sustainability. Materials efficiency
requires the following:
designing all goods and services to require much less virgin material
creating policies that promote and support materials conservation, recovery and
efficiency
developing creative strategies for materials efficiency and waste prevention in
homes, businesses and institutions
recovering the maximum amount of materials from the waste stream
fostering a robust economy for secondary (recovered) materials
The links and information in this section will help your community learn more about
promising practices and technologies for the "4Rs" (Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, and
Rebuy), Composting, and Waste-to-Energy as invaluable strategies for materials efficiency
and waste prevention.
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