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Urban-scale material flow analysis in a South African context: a Cape Town feasibility study

Urban-scale Material Flow Analyses (MFAs) in the global south provide unique challenges compared to national MFAs and to urban MFAs in the north. In order to determine the feasibility of undertaking an urban-scale MFA in the global south, this dissertation sets out to undertake an MFA on Cape Town,...

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Main Author: Hoekman, Paul
Other Authors: Von Blottnitz, Harro
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Environmental and Geographical Science 2015
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access_status_str Open Access
author Hoekman, Paul
author2 Von Blottnitz, Harro
author_browse Hoekman, Paul
Von Blottnitz, Harro
author_facet Von Blottnitz, Harro
Hoekman, Paul
author_sort Hoekman, Paul
collection Thesis
description Urban-scale Material Flow Analyses (MFAs) in the global south provide unique challenges compared to national MFAs and to urban MFAs in the north. In order to determine the feasibility of undertaking an urban-scale MFA in the global south, this dissertation sets out to undertake an MFA on Cape Town, and thoroughly analyze the data collection process, document the challenges, and interpret data quantity and quality. Data were found for nearly all flows defined in the Eurostat methodology, but only for the most recent of three consecutive years under study. Data quality is challenged by high variance in reliability of sources, difficulty in obtaining documents, additional work required to process the data, lack of data on informal or illegal flows, and the scattered distribution of sources. Data collection took 345 hours during a period of 22 weeks and involved interaction with a total of 325 contacts and 86 documents. The principal activities were related to contacting and interacting with people. Most time was spent on e-mailing and meeting people, and significant time was furthermore spent on transportation to and from meetings. Not all time was spent effectively and efficiently. Chasing unreliable data and unproductive cross-checking were the principal culprits. Despite the challenges, the quantity and quality of data are of a sufficient level to provide interesting insights into the urban metabolism for Cape Town, and undertaking this kind of urban-scale MFA is thus deemed feasible. Once a time-consuming, initial MFA has identified valuable and reliable sources, periodic repetition should be relatively uncomplicated. Through government involvement or industry cooperation, data collection and data sharing with a few key stakeholders can make regular urban MFA reporting a feasible reality. This work shows who those key stakeholders are and how researchers and government can undertake and improve future urban MFA studies - not only on Cape Town but also on other regions and cities in South Africa. This MFA feasibility study furthermore provided useful insight into the metabolism of Cape Town. For 2013, local extraction was 1.53 t per capita, mostly consisting of non-metallic minerals mined within the borders of Cape Town. Wild fish catch is half of the biomass extraction. Imports and exports were 4.04 t and 2.15 t per capita, respectively, with food and fossil fuels weighing heavily on the imports. The exports are dominated by processed foods and products from the manufacturing industry. Emissions to air can be contrasted with the results from Gasson (2007). Significant per-capita emission increases are seen for CO2 , coupled with decreases for most other emissions to air. Compared to other Eurostat-based urban studies on cities in Western Europe, Cape Town resource flows are significantly lower on a per-capita basis.
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language eng
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2015
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publisher Department of Environmental and Geographical Science
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/15499 Urban-scale material flow analysis in a South African context: a Cape Town feasibility study Hoekman, Paul Von Blottnitz, Harro Environmental and Geographical Science Urban-scale Material Flow Analyses (MFAs) in the global south provide unique challenges compared to national MFAs and to urban MFAs in the north. In order to determine the feasibility of undertaking an urban-scale MFA in the global south, this dissertation sets out to undertake an MFA on Cape Town, and thoroughly analyze the data collection process, document the challenges, and interpret data quantity and quality. Data were found for nearly all flows defined in the Eurostat methodology, but only for the most recent of three consecutive years under study. Data quality is challenged by high variance in reliability of sources, difficulty in obtaining documents, additional work required to process the data, lack of data on informal or illegal flows, and the scattered distribution of sources. Data collection took 345 hours during a period of 22 weeks and involved interaction with a total of 325 contacts and 86 documents. The principal activities were related to contacting and interacting with people. Most time was spent on e-mailing and meeting people, and significant time was furthermore spent on transportation to and from meetings. Not all time was spent effectively and efficiently. Chasing unreliable data and unproductive cross-checking were the principal culprits. Despite the challenges, the quantity and quality of data are of a sufficient level to provide interesting insights into the urban metabolism for Cape Town, and undertaking this kind of urban-scale MFA is thus deemed feasible. Once a time-consuming, initial MFA has identified valuable and reliable sources, periodic repetition should be relatively uncomplicated. Through government involvement or industry cooperation, data collection and data sharing with a few key stakeholders can make regular urban MFA reporting a feasible reality. This work shows who those key stakeholders are and how researchers and government can undertake and improve future urban MFA studies - not only on Cape Town but also on other regions and cities in South Africa. This MFA feasibility study furthermore provided useful insight into the metabolism of Cape Town. For 2013, local extraction was 1.53 t per capita, mostly consisting of non-metallic minerals mined within the borders of Cape Town. Wild fish catch is half of the biomass extraction. Imports and exports were 4.04 t and 2.15 t per capita, respectively, with food and fossil fuels weighing heavily on the imports. The exports are dominated by processed foods and products from the manufacturing industry. Emissions to air can be contrasted with the results from Gasson (2007). Significant per-capita emission increases are seen for CO2 , coupled with decreases for most other emissions to air. Compared to other Eurostat-based urban studies on cities in Western Europe, Cape Town resource flows are significantly lower on a per-capita basis. 2015-12-01T10:00:11Z 2015-12-01T10:00:11Z 2015 Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15499 eng application/pdf Department of Environmental and Geographical Science Faculty of Science University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Environmental and Geographical Science
Hoekman, Paul
Urban-scale material flow analysis in a South African context: a Cape Town feasibility study
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Urban-scale material flow analysis in a South African context: a Cape Town feasibility study
title_full Urban-scale material flow analysis in a South African context: a Cape Town feasibility study
title_fullStr Urban-scale material flow analysis in a South African context: a Cape Town feasibility study
title_full_unstemmed Urban-scale material flow analysis in a South African context: a Cape Town feasibility study
title_short Urban-scale material flow analysis in a South African context: a Cape Town feasibility study
title_sort urban scale material flow analysis in a south african context a cape town feasibility study
topic Environmental and Geographical Science
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/15499
work_keys_str_mv AT hoekmanpaul urbanscalematerialflowanalysisinasouthafricancontextacapetownfeasibilitystudy