(Redirected from Natural resources)
'Natural resources' are naturally occurring substances that are considered valuable in their relatively unmodified (
natural) form. A natural resource's value rests in the amount of the material available and the
demand for it. The latter is determined by its usefulness to production. A
commodity is generally considered a natural resource when the primary activities associated with it are extraction and purification, as opposed to creation. Thus,
mining,
petroleum extraction,
fishing,
hunting, and
forestry are generally considered natural-resource industries, while
agriculture is not. The term was introduced to a broad audience by
E.F. Schumacher in his 1970s book
Small is Beautiful.
Natural resources are often classified into
renewable, flow, and
non-renewable resources. Renewable resources are generally living resources (
fish,
reindeer,
coffee, and
forests, for example), which can restock (renew) themselves if they are not
over-harvested but used
sustainably. Once renewable resources are consumed at a rate that exceeds their natural rate of replacement, the standing stock (see
renewable energy) will diminish and eventually run out. The rate of sustainable use of a renewable resource is determined by the replacement rate and amount of standing stock of that particular resource. Non-living renewable natural resources include
soil and
water.
Flow renewable resources are very much like renewable resources, only they do not need regeneration, unlike renewable resources. Flow renewable resources include
wind,
tides and
solar radiation
Resources can also be classified on the basis of their origin as
biotic and
abiotic. Biotic resources are derived from living organisms. Abiotic resources are derived from the non-living world (e.g., land, water, and air). Mineral and power resources are also abiotic resources some of which are derived from nature.
Both extraction of the basic resource and
refining it into a purer, directly usable form, (e.g.,
metals, refined oils) are generally considered natural-resource activities, even though the latter may not necessarily occur near the former.
Natural resources are
natural capital converted to
commodity inputs to
infrastructural capital processes. They include soil,
timber,
oil,
minerals, and other goods taken more or less from the Earth.
A nation's natural resources often determine its wealth and status in the world economic system, by determining its political influence.
Developed nations are those which are less dependent on natural resources for wealth, due to their greater reliance on
infrastructural capital for production. However, some see a
resource curse whereby easily obtainable natural resources could actually hurt the prospects of a national economy by fostering political corruption.
In recent years, the depletion of natural capital and attempts to move to
sustainable development have been a major focus of
development agencies. This is of particular concern in
rainforest regions, which hold most of the Earth's natural
biodiversity - irreplaceable genetic natural capital.
Conservation of natural resources is the major focus of
natural capitalism,
environmentalism, the
ecology movement, and
Green Parties. Some view this depletion as a major source of social unrest and conflicts in developing nations.
Some resources can be renewable but take an extremely long time to renew. Fossil fuels, for example, take millions of years to form and so are not practically considered 'renewable'.
See also
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Ecoregion
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Natural environment
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Land (economics)
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List of minerals
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List of natural gas fields
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List of oil fields
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Non-renewable resources
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Renewable resources
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Sustainable forest management
External links
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Statistics on Natural Resources in Canada