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This book explores the challenges our society faces in making the
transition to renewable resource use in a way that is truly
sustainable - environmentally, economically and socially. After
exploring the physical limits the laws of thermodynamics impose on
resource exploitation, the book outlines options for managing
resources within these limits. It then moves on to look at the
resources themselves (from fossil fuels, through minerals to
renewable resources such as timber) and the salient question of how
the relentless increase in consumption is putting untenable strain
on resource use. Case studies investigate what is being done across
a range of sectors - and what is and isn't working. The second half
of the book turns to solutions, from the promise of industrial
ecology to a new economy based on renewable resources such as
biobased materials from agricultural crops and forests. Suitable
for under- and postgraduate courses on environmental limits and
resource use, and continuing professional development -
particularly resource management, materials, industrial ecology,
energy, resource economics and engineering.
This book explores the challenges our society faces in making the
transition to renewable resource use in a way that is truly
sustainable - environmentally, economically and socially. After
exploring the physical limits the laws of thermodynamics impose on
resource exploitation, the book outlines options for managing
resources within these limits. It then moves on to look at the
resources themselves (from fossil fuels, through minerals to
renewable resources such as timber) and the salient question of how
the relentless increase in consumption is putting untenable strain
on resource use. Case studies investigate what is being done across
a range of sectors - and what is and isn't working. The second half
of the book turns to solutions, from the promise of industrial
ecology to a new economy based on renewable resources such as
biobased materials from agricultural crops and forests. Suitable
for under- and postgraduate courses on environmental limits and
resource use, and continuing professional development -
particularly resource management, materials, industrial ecology,
energy, resource economics and engineering.
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