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This is the first book that analyses the future raw materials
supply from the demand side of a society that chiefly relies on
renewable energies, which is of great significance for us all. It
addresses primary and secondary resources and substitution, not
only from technical but also socioeconomic and ethical points of
view. The "Energiewende" (Energy Transition) will change our
consumption of natural resources significantly. When in future our
energy requirements will be covered mostly by wind, solar power and
biomass, we will need less coal, oil and natural gas. However, the
consumption of minerals, especially metallic resources, will
increase to build wind generators, solar panels or energy storage
facilities. Besides e.g. copper, nickel or cobalt, rare earth
elements and other high-tech elements will be increasingly used.
With regard to primary metals, Germany is 100 % import dependent;
only secondary material is produced within Germany. Though
sufficient geological primary resources exist worldwide, their
availability on the market is crucial. The future supply of the
market is dependent on the development of prices, the transparency
of the market and the question of social and ethical standards in
the raw materials industry, as well as the social license to
operate, which especially applies to mining. The book offers a
valuable resource for everyone interested in the future raw
material supply of our way of life, which will involve more and
more renewable energies.
The present volume contains 17 lectures of the 41 st Mosbach
Colloquium of the Gesellschaft fiir Biologische Chemie, held from
April 5-7, 1990 on the topic "The Molecular Basis of Bacterial
Metabolism". From the beginning it was not the intention of the
organizers to present a comprehensive account, but rather to select
new, exciting progress on sometimes exotic reactions of
specifically bacterial, mainly anaerobic metabolism. Members of our
society had contributed to this progress to an extent that greatly
stimulated the scientific exchange with international colleagues
during the days in Mosbach. The editors hope that this stimulation
will be conveyed to the readers of the articles, which reach from
the biochemistry of methanogenesis, via anaerobic radical
reactions, metal biochemistry in hydrogen and nitrogen metabolism,
conversions of light - and redox energy, to the regulation of
metabolic adaptation, and the attempts to bioengineer novel
pathways for the degradation of xenobiotica. We believe that the
book represents a highly progressive field of over lapping
disciplines, comprising microbiology and molecular genetics,
chemistry of biomimetic interest, and biophysics, and that it gives
insight into the impact modern technologies have on microbiological
research today. The colloquium was generously supported by the
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, the Paul-Martini-Stiftung, and the
Fonds fiir Biologische Chemie. A. Trebst, G. Schafer, and D.
Oesterhelt were a great help in preparing the program and we wish
to thank them for their advice.
This is the first book that analyses the future raw materials
supply from the demand side of a society that chiefly relies on
renewable energies, which is of great significance for us all. It
addresses primary and secondary resources and substitution, not
only from technical but also socioeconomic and ethical points of
view. The "Energiewende" (Energy Transition) will change our
consumption of natural resources significantly. When in future our
energy requirements will be covered mostly by wind, solar power and
biomass, we will need less coal, oil and natural gas. However, the
consumption of minerals, especially metallic resources, will
increase to build wind generators, solar panels or energy storage
facilities. Besides e.g. copper, nickel or cobalt, rare earth
elements and other high-tech elements will be increasingly used.
With regard to primary metals, Germany is 100 % import dependent;
only secondary material is produced within Germany. Though
sufficient geological primary resources exist worldwide, their
availability on the market is crucial. The future supply of the
market is dependent on the development of prices, the transparency
of the market and the question of social and ethical standards in
the raw materials industry, as well as the social license to
operate, which especially applies to mining. The book offers a
valuable resource for everyone interested in the future raw
material supply of our way of life, which will involve more and
more renewable energies.
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