Energy Critical Elements: Securing Materials For Emerging Technologies

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Jonathan G. Price
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
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2
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2154 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2011

Abstract

The 2011 report titled ?Energy Critical Elements: Securing Materials for Emerging Technologies? by the American Physical Society?s Panel on Public Affairs and the Materials Research Society surveys potential constraints on the availability of these elements and identifies five specific areas of potential action by the United States to ensure their availability: 1) federal agency coordination; 2) information collection, analysis and dissemination; 3) research, development and workforce enhancement; 4) efficient use of materials and 5) market interventions. Energy-critical elements (ECEs) are a class of chemical elements that currently are critical to one or more new energy-related technologies. A shortage of these elements would significantly inhibit large-scale deployment, which could otherwise be capable of transforming the way in which energy is produced, transmitted, stored or conserved. The report addresses elements that have not been widely extracted, traded or used in the past, and therefore are not the focus of well-established and relatively stable markets (such as carbon in coal or uranium as fuels, copper, aluminum, nickel and iron, all of which are clearly vital in energy applications).
Citation

APA: Jonathan G. Price  (2011)  Energy Critical Elements: Securing Materials For Emerging Technologies

MLA: Jonathan G. Price Energy Critical Elements: Securing Materials For Emerging Technologies. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2011.

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