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Living in a Material World

Energy efficiency for many important manufacturing processes is approaching a plateau

MIT News
Fri, 04/05/2013 - 11:25
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A new report by researchers at MIT and elsewhere finds that the global manufacturing sector has made great strides in energy efficiency: The manufacturing of materials such as steel, cement, paper, and aluminum has become increasingly streamlined, requiring far less energy than when these processes were first invented.

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However, despite more energy-efficient manufacturing, the researchers found that such processes may be approaching their thermodynamic limits. There are increasingly limited options available to make them significantly more efficient. The result, the team observed, is that energy efficiency for many important processes in manufacturing is approaching a plateau.

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Comments

Submitted by umberto mario tunesi on Wed, 04/10/2013 - 21:15

Globistics

That is, global logistics. One, the people masses have still to be trained to recycle materials: it's all too easy to buy a new item instead of recycling a worn one; only the Poor could teach us to. Two, many jobs - like high level studying - can be done at home, instead of making tele-commuting competing with high-expensive, high-energy consuming traveling. I live between mountain and seaside, maximum two hours drive from each: why should I board a jet for Mauritius or Florida or Everest? Let's step on our own yard, please. Thank you.

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