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Urban mining: hibernating copper stocks in local power grids
Authors:Joakim Krook  Annica Carlsson  Mats Eklund  Per Frändegård  Niclas Svensson
Institution:1. Graduate School of Environmental Studies, Nagoya University, Japan;2. Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), Australia;3. School of Sociology, Australian National University (ANU), Canberra, Australia;1. Department of Civil, Environmental and Mechanical Engineering, University of Trento, via Mesiano, 77, 38123, Trento, Italy;2. Municipality of Trento, via Belenzani 20, Trento, Italy;3. Department of Industrial Engineering and Management, Lucian Blaga University of Sibiu, Str. Emil Cioran, 4, 550025, Sibiu, Romania;4. Department Energy production and Use, University Politehnica of Bucharest, Splaiul Independentei nr. 313, 6, Bucharest, 060042, Romania;5. Academy of Romanian Scientists, Splaiul Independentei, 54, sector 5, 050094 Bucharest, Romania
Abstract:Large technical systems serving the everyday needs of people, such as water supply systems, power grids or communication networks, are rich in accumulated metals. Over time, parts of these systems have been taken out of use without the system infrastructure being removed from its original location. Such metal stocks in hibernation thus constitute potential resource reservoirs accessible for recovery. In this paper, obsolete stocks of copper situated in the local power grids of two Swedish cities are quantified. Emphasis is also on economic conditions for extracting such “hibernating” cables. The results show that on a per customer basis, the two power grids contain similar amounts of copper, i.e. 0.04–0.05 tonnes per subscriber. However, the share of the copper stock that is in hibernation differs between the grids. In the larger grid of Gothenburg, almost 20% of the copper accumulated in the grid is no longer in use, while the obsolete share does not exceed 5% in the city of Linköping. For managers of local power grids, recovery of hibernating cables could be beneficial if integrated with other maintenance work on the grid. At the present price of copper, however, separate recovery of obsolete cables is not economically justified.
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