Criticality of the Geological
Copper Family
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Abstract
Because modern technology depends on reliable supplies
of a wide
variety of materials, and because of increasing concern about those
supplies, a comprehensive methodology has been created to quantify
the degree of criticality of the metals of the periodic table. In
this paper, we apply this methodology to the elements of the geological
copper family: Cu, As, Se, Ag, Te, and Au. These elements are technologically
important, but show a substantial variation in different factors relating
to their supply risk, vulnerability to supply restriction, and environmental
implications. Assessments are made on corporate, national, and global
levels for year 2008. Evaluations of each of the multiple indicators
are presented and the results plotted in “criticality space”,
together with Monte Carlo simulation-derived “uncertainty cloud”
estimates for each of the aggregated evaluations. For supply risk
over both the medium term and long term, As is the highest risk of
the six metals, with Se and Ag nearly as high. Gold has the most severe
environmental implications ranking. Vulnerability to supply restriction
(VSR) at the corporate level for an invented solar cell manufacturing
firm shows Se, Te, and Cu as approximately equal, Cu has the highest
VSR at the national level, and Cu and Au have the highest VSRs at
the global level. Criticality vector magnitudes are greatest at the
global level for As (and then Au and Ag) and at the national level
for As and Au; at the corporate level, Se is highest with Te and Cu
lower. An extension of this work, now in progress, will provide criticality
estimates for several different development scenarios for the period
2010–2050