OFR-72-92 Materials Flow Of Zinc In The United States 1850-1990

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
James H. Jolly
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
53
File Size:
5250 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1992

Abstract

Although zinc in the environment is generally considered to be beneficial or benign, excessive amounts can cause deterioration of environmental quality and toxicity problems for some plants and animals. High amounts of zinc in the environment are often associated with anthropogenic activities, mainly those involving zinc production and consumption and those related to the use and disposal of zinc-containing products. To obtain some upper limit parameters on the historical quantities of zinc chat may have entered the U.S. environment from anthropogenic sources, the Bureau of Mines conducted a materials flow study of zinc from the earliest beginning of the domestic industry through 1990 and for the year 1989. For comparative purposes a generalized historical materials flow of zinc for the world was also prepared. The United States was the world's leading producer and consumer of zinc in the 1850-1990 period. In that period, U.S. mines and smelters produced 15% and 20%, respectively, of world output, and U.S. zinc consumption accounted for about one-fourth of the world total. Maximum zinc losses into the environment related to the above production, consumption, and disposal of end use products total about 63 million tons. Dissipative uses and landfill disposal have accounted for about 73% of the potential zinc losses to the environment, followed by mining and smelting 22%, and manufacturing, 5%. At the end of 1990, contained zinc in useful end-products in the United States was estimated to be about 23 million tons. In 1989 slightly more than 1 million metric tons of zinc in new zinc-containing products were added to the domestic pool of zinc in use but in the same year, an estimated 0.9 million tons was dissipated and discarded, indicating only small net gains to the zinc pool of use annually.
Citation

APA: James H. Jolly  (1992)  OFR-72-92 Materials Flow Of Zinc In The United States 1850-1990

MLA: James H. Jolly OFR-72-92 Materials Flow Of Zinc In The United States 1850-1990. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1992.

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