Elsa Dominish, senior research consultant for the the Australia-based ISF, pointed out that “if manufacturers commit to responsible sourcing this will encourage more mines to engage in responsible practices and certification.” She also noted that there is “an urgent need to invest in recycling and reuse schemes to ensure the valuable metals used in these technologies are recovered, so only what is necessary is mined.”

On a global scale, ISF researchers’ key findings include:

The analysis focuses on 14 metals:

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Of all the metals studied, copper, lithium, silver, and rare earths present the biggest challenges for substitution, efficiency, and recycling, for a variety of reasons.

As the report explains:

Given the challenges for those particular minerals as well as the broad environmental and human costs of current mining practices, ISF research director Sven Teske emphasized the need to prioritize improving extraction processes along with transformative climate policies.

“The responsible materials transition,” said Teske, “will need to be scaled up just as ambitiously as the 100 percent renewable energy transition.”

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