Stocks (Module 6) - Online course Sector-Wide Circularity Assessment
The slides for this presentation can be found here.
Outline of the video
- Material stock: very different from what we have been discussing before
- What is material stock: something that sits in the city for a long period of time, generally longer than a year. They also have an environmental impact.
- Either produced in the city, or comes in as a flow and stays. After some time it leaves the city as a flow again.
- built infrastructure: buildings, roads, railroads, pipes; electronics, vehicles; biomass: livestock, wood, stored grain;
- It should be part of the economic system. We don't collect info on birds for example.
- M6:52, types, summary of what we are interested in
- Buildings
- Roads
- Vehicles
- Biomass
- Other specific products/materials present > 1 year
- M7:30, relevance, why do we care about this
- Stocks&flows are interwoven
- Holistic understanding
- Urban mining
- M9:25, what to look for?
- Quantity (weight);
- but sometimes you will only find number of something or length (e.g. road network)
- Material composition
- Age
- How old
- What is expected lifetime
- Growth
- Get data for a number of years
- Or get an idea at which rate this is growing
- Quantity (weight);
- M11:13, types of information
- Building stock
- Building-based shapefile
- Total built footprint (surface area)
- Building details (height, number of floors, materials used, age, etc.)
- Studies (building types, specific materials, etc.)
- Data on number of buildings, locations etc.
- Bill of materials for key infrastructure (used by architects as an input list for buildings)
- Vehicles
- Vehicle count
- Biomass
- Animals (livestock)
- Trees
- Material stock
- Studies
- Building stock
- M13:46, examples
- Nickel-Cadmium batteries in Cape Town
- Copper in use, in Cape Town
- Number of registered vehicles per province
- "Prospecting the urban mine Amsterdam" PUMA study
- Spatial datasets of Cape Town
- M17:36, Sources
- Cadastre
- Vehicle registration agency
- Local government reports
- Google Scholar
- Keywords: building footprint, building types, vehicle count
Something wrong with this information? Report errors here.