posted on 2016-02-20, 13:59authored byWei-Qiang Chen, T. E. Graedel
A cycle is the quantitative characterization of the flows
of a
specific material into, within, and from a given system. An anthropogenic
elemental cycle can be static (for a point in time) or dynamic (over
a time interval). The about 350 publications collected for this review
contain a total of 1074 individual cycle determinations, 989 static
and 85 dynamic, for 59 elements; more than 90% of the publications
have appeared since 2000. The cycles are of varying quality and completeness,
with about 80% at country- or territory-level, addressing 45 elements,
and 5% at global-level, addressing 30 elements. Despite their limitations,
cycles have often been successful in revealing otherwise unknown information.
Most of the elements for which no cycles exist are radioactively unstable
or are used rarely and in small amounts. For a variety of reasons,
the anthropogenic cycles of only perhaps a dozen elements are well
characterized. For all the others, with cycles limited or nonexistent,
our knowledge of types of uses, lifetimes in those uses, international
trade, losses to the environment, and rates of recycling is quite
limited, thereby making attempts to evaluate resource sustainability
particularly problematic.