As a major urban centre, the city of Cape Town possesses a large
reservoir of in-use copper. As the metal's uses become obsolete,
the copper will gradually become available for re-use, should that
prove technically feasible and economically desirable. To evaluate
this resource, we identified the principal uses of the metal in the city
and its surroundings, quantified them, and estimated their in-use
lifetime. We used this information to estimate in-use stock at about
110 Gg (110 million kg) copper and to predict end-of-life flows
for several decades into the future. A model, using geographic
information system (GIS) software, was developed to assess
contemporary stocks spatially and to predict future stocks according
to selected uses. The largest stocks are in the area formerly
administered by the Central Cape Town municipal council, that is
expected also to be the principal copper reservoir in the future.
Impoverished areas turned out to have higher spatial densities of
copper than wealthy suburbs, because of their high-density
housing. The total stock of in-use copper in Cape Town today
appears to be less than 1% of South Africa's mineral reserves of the
metal, but its recovery and re-use appears to be justified because of
its relatively low associated environmental cost.We conclude that if
all end-of-life copper is reprocessed, rather than discarded or
transferred outside the region, it could supply up to 60% of Cape
Town's copper demand over the next three decades.
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