• For Individuals
  • For Businesses
  • For Universities
  • For Governments
Coursera
Online Degrees
Careers
Log In
Join for Free
Coursera
Universiteit Leiden
A Circular Economy of Metals: Towards a Sustainable Societal Metabolism
  • About
  • Modules
  • Recommendations
  • Testimonials
  • Reviews
  1. Browse
  2. Physical Science and Engineering
  3. Environmental Science and Sustainability
Universiteit Leiden

A Circular Economy of Metals: Towards a Sustainable Societal Metabolism

Ester van der Voet

Instructor: Ester van der Voet

7,807 already enrolled

7 modules
Gain insight into a topic and learn the fundamentals.
4.7

(102 reviews)

Beginner level
No prior experience required
Flexible schedule
4 weeks at 10 hours a week
Learn at your own pace
97%
Most learners liked this course

7 modules
Gain insight into a topic and learn the fundamentals.
4.7

(102 reviews)

Beginner level
No prior experience required
Flexible schedule
4 weeks at 10 hours a week
Learn at your own pace
97%
Most learners liked this course
  • About
  • Modules
  • Recommendations
  • Testimonials
  • Reviews

What you'll learn

  • learn about the challenges related to metals production and usage

  • learn about the potential solutions that exist to act on these challenges

Skills you'll gain

  • Forecasting
  • Economic Development
  • Resource Utilization
  • Product Lifecycle Management
  • Environment
  • Supply And Demand
  • Corporate Sustainability
  • Waste Minimization
  • Systems Thinking
  • Environmental Resource Management

Details to know

Shareable certificate

Add to your LinkedIn profile

Assessments

7 assignments¹

AI Graded see disclaimer
Taught in English

See how employees at top companies are mastering in-demand skills

Learn more about Coursera for Business
 logos of Petrobras, TATA, Danone, Capgemini, P&G and L'Oreal

There are 7 modules in this course

Metals are present everywhere around us and are one of the major materials upon which our economies are built. Economic development is deeply coupled with the use of metals. During the 20th century, the variety of metal applications in society grew rapidly. In addition to mass applications such as steel in buildings and aluminium in planes, more and more different metals are in use for innovative technologies such as the use of the speciality metal indium in LCD screens.

A lot of metals will be needed in the future. It will not be easy to provide them. In particular in emerging economies, but also in industrialised countries, the demand for metals is increasing rapidly. Mining and production activities expand, and with that also the environmental consequences of metal production. In this course, we will explore those consequences and we will also explore options to move towards a more sustainable system of metals production and use. We will focus especially on the options to reach a circular economy for metals: keeping metals in use for a very long time, to avoid having to mine new ones. This course is based on the reports of the Global Metals Flows Group of the International Resource Panel that is part of UN Environment. An important aspect that will come back each week, are the UN Sustainable Development Goals, the SDGs. Those are ambitious goals to measure our progress towards a more sustainable world. We will use the SDGs as a touching stone for the assessment of the metals challenge, as well as the solutions we present in this course to solve that challenge.

Welcome to the course! This first module aims at introducing you to the main topic of the MOOC and to the teaching staff that you will be seeing throughout the whole course. Before you start with the first lessons we encourage you to have a look at our introductory materials and to introduce yourself in the forum in order to meet your classmates.

What's included

4 videos3 readings1 discussion prompt1 plugin

4 videos•Total 18 minutes
  • Introduction to the Course•9 minutes
  • How to succeed in your online class?•2 minutes
  • Introduction to SDGs: Dr. Janez Potočnik•2 minutes
  • Introduction to UNEP International Resource Panel: Dr. Patrice Christmann•4 minutes
3 readings•Total 55 minutes
  • Meet the Instructor & the Team•5 minutes
  • The World Bank: The 2017 Atlas of Sustainable Development Goals•30 minutes
  • The Lazy Person's Guide to Saving the World•20 minutes
1 discussion prompt•Total 20 minutes
  • E-tivity: Introduce Yourself•20 minutes
1 plugin•Total 2 minutes
  • Discover The World at Leiden University [video]•2 minutes

In Week 1, you will be introduced to the world of metals. What are they, what are their properties, what are they used for and how essential are they? We will address the difference between major and minor metals. Major metals are used in large basic applications such as buildings, cars, pipes, cables, bridges, trains and airplanes. Minor metals that are used mostly in all kinds of electronics and in new technologies, for example for wind and solar energy. The amounts used are much smaller. The minor metals have more attention in the news, because of problems with the supply from international trade, and are subject to criticality assessments. The major metals, on the other hand, are even more important, although less in the centre of attention. Without them, society would fall apart. In this course, we will focus mostly on those major metals. We also introduce the Sustainable Development Goals of the United Nations. These SDGs are agreed on by all nations that are part of the UN, and outline goals for the future of the global society. They include goals on economic development, social development, health and the environment and form a powerful framework to judge developments in resource use, including metal use.

What's included

7 videos2 readings1 assignment3 discussion prompts

7 videos•Total 34 minutes
  • Introduction to Metals in Society•1 minute
  • The Periodic Table of Elements•3 minutes
  • Insights from the Life-Cycle of Metals by Prof. dr. Thomas E. Graedel•5 minutes
  • Life-Cycles of Selected Metals (Part 1)•5 minutes
  • Life-Cycles of Selected Metals (Part 2)•7 minutes
  • Metals in the 20th Century•9 minutes
  • Summary of Metals in Society•0 minutes
2 readings•Total 120 minutes
  • Life-Cycle Impact of Rare Earth Elements•30 minutes
  • Suggested Readings and Materials•90 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
  • Test your knowledge•30 minutes
3 discussion prompts•Total 60 minutes
  • Metal Applications•20 minutes
  • Metals in the 21th Century•20 minutes
  • Sustainable Development Goals•20 minutes

In week 2, the metals challenge is outlined. Metals are indispensable for society, but they are also associated with environmental impacts, especially related to climate change. The challenge is defined as how can we provide society with sufficient metals, now and in the future, without compromising environmental quality? An important part of the challenge is caused by the rapidly rising demand for metals. Over the 20th century demand has risen steeply, and this is expected to continue over the next decades. In this week, we will teach the issues around metal supply, scarcity and criticality, and environmental impacts to sketch the magnitude of the metals challenge. We also will meet the apparent contradiction between some of the SDGs: we need metals to develop societies and build up the infrastructure, on the other hand, we also need to reduce environmental impacts that will only increase if we don’t do anything about it.

What's included

12 videos4 readings1 assignment3 discussion prompts

12 videos•Total 102 minutes
  • Introduction to Metals Challenge•2 minutes
  • Future Demand and Supply•9 minutes
  • Scarcity and Depletion•2 minutes
  • Impacts of Metal Use•11 minutes
  • Criticality of Metals•24 minutes
  • Summary of Metals Challenge•0 minutes
  • Energy for Metals•3 minutes
  • Metals for Energy•7 minutes
  • Criticality of Metals by Thomas E. Graedel (Part 1)•8 minutes
  • Criticality of Metals by Thomas E. Graedel (Part 2)•12 minutes
  • Criticality of Metals by Thomas E. Graedel (Part 3)•11 minutes
  • Future Demand and Supply (Additional Material)•7 minutes
4 readings•Total 280 minutes
  • Environmental Risks and Challenges of Anthropogenic Metals Flows and Cycles: International Resource Panel's Report•60 minutes
  • Criticality of Metals•40 minutes
  • Environmental Impacts of Rare Earth Mining and Separation Based on Eudialyte: A New European Way•30 minutes
  • Suggested Readings and Materials•150 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
  • Test your knowledge•30 minutes
3 discussion prompts•Total 60 minutes
  • Environmental Impacts of Metals•20 minutes
  • Criticality of Metals•20 minutes
  • Sustainable Development Goals•20 minutes

Week 3 and all subsequent weeks focus on solving the metals challenge. Obviously, we need to make changes in the metals system to reach a more sustainable situation and reconcile the different Sustainable Development Goals. When considering changes, it is important first to understand the system. We will be discussing stocks and flows of metals in society and see how they interact. In society, we do not just obey the laws of justice and economics, but also the laws of nature. It is important to realise that when contemplating solutions for the metals challenge. This week will be rather theoretical but will provide important information for the coming weeks.

What's included

5 videos3 readings1 assignment2 discussion prompts

5 videos•Total 24 minutes
  • Introduction to Dynamics of Metal Systems•2 minutes
  • Stocks of Metal in Society by Thomas E. Graedel•3 minutes
  • Distinguishing between Stocks and Flows by Thomas E. Graedel•3 minutes
  • Stock Dynamics and Modelling•13 minutes
  • Summary of Dynamics of Metal Systems•1 minute
3 readings•Total 190 minutes
  • Metal Stocks in Society: The International Resource Panel's Report•60 minutes
  • Urban Mines of Copper: Size and Potential for Recycling in the EU•30 minutes
  • Suggested Readings and Materials•100 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
  • Test your knowledge•30 minutes
2 discussion prompts•Total 40 minutes
  • Stocks and Flows Dynamics•20 minutes
  • Sustainable Development Goals•20 minutes

Week 4 is rather packed with lectures on the different options to solve the metals challenge. You will meet experts from all over the world, who will lecture on materials and product design-for-environment and design-for-recycling, on the possibilities and also the barriers for remanufacturing, and on recycling as the last, but maybe most important resort to keep the metals in use. All these options aim at keeping up the stock-in-use of metals in society, while at the same time reducing the need to mine new metals. They all have their own strengths and limitations and can be regarded as pieces of the large puzzle aiming at solving the metals challenge, or in other words, reconciling the different SDGs.

What's included

11 videos3 readings1 assignment3 discussion prompts

11 videos•Total 84 minutes
  • Introduction to Solution to the Metals Challenge•1 minute
  • Possible Solutions•5 minutes
  • Recycling Rates for Metals by Thomas E. Graedel•9 minutes
  • Materials Design for Recycling by Erik Offerman (Part 1)•10 minutes
  • Materials Design for Recycling by Erik Offerman (Part 2)•12 minutes
  • Product Design by Conny Bakker•5 minutes
  • Remanufacturing•15 minutes
  • Summary of Solutions to the Metals Challenge•1 minute
  • Product-centric Recycling to Increase Recycling Rates by Markus Reuter (Part 1)•10 minutes
  • Product-centric Recycling to Increase Recycling Rates by Markus Reuter (Part 2)•13 minutes
  • Elements, materials, products, elements. Animation by Ruben Huele•0 minutes
3 readings•Total 270 minutes
  • Recycling Rates of Metals: The International Resource Panel's Report•60 minutes
  • Metal Recycling: The International Resource Panel's Report•60 minutes
  • Suggested Readings and Materials•150 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
  • Test your knowledge•30 minutes
3 discussion prompts•Total 60 minutes
  • Product Design•20 minutes
  • Deep-sea Mining•20 minutes
  • Sustainable Development Goals•20 minutes

In week 5, we try to get some idea of what the effectiveness could be of going for a circular economy. We do not consider all changes in society that have to be made to reach that, but simply have a look at whether or not, if we would reach a circular economy, we would indeed solve the metals challenge. Can we, theoretically, maintain supply and at the same time avoid supply problems and environmental issues in that way? And therefore, is it worthwhile pursuing a circular economy to reconcile the different SDGs? We use the case of aluminium to illustrate this.

What's included

6 videos4 readings1 assignment1 peer review1 discussion prompt1 plugin

6 videos•Total 33 minutes
  • Introduction to Circular Economy as an Overarching Solution•1 minute
  • The Circular Economy•6 minutes
  • Climbing the Materials Ladder•2 minutes
  • Circular Economy for Aluminium (Part 1)•11 minutes
  • Circular Economy for Aluminium (Part 2)•9 minutes
  • Summary of Circular Economy as an Overarching Solution•1 minute
4 readings•Total 250 minutes
  • Product Design in a Circular Economy Development of a Typology of Key Concepts and Terms•30 minutes
  • Suggested Readings and Materials•180 minutes
  • From Linear to Circular Economy: PSS conducting the transition•30 minutes
  • Opportunities for a circular economy•10 minutes
1 assignment•Total 30 minutes
  • Test your knowledge•30 minutes
1 peer review•Total 120 minutes
  • Circular Economy•120 minutes
1 discussion prompt•Total 20 minutes
  • Sustainable Development Goals•20 minutes
1 plugin•Total 15 minutes
  • Rethinking Progress: The Circular Economy [video by Ellen MacArthur Foundation]•15 minutes

In this final week of the course, we will look briefly into the future. What can we expect for the next decades or even the next century? We’ll introduce the concept of scenarios, storylines about the future that have no predictive value but have their value as imagination of what could happen, and what the consequences would be if it did. And we will apply that to our major metals. Will demand go on rising? What will happen with the environmental impacts? Does it help, from the point of view of metal production, to have a renewable energy system in the background? Will more circularity in our economy make a difference? In short, is it possible to reconcile the SDG development goals with the environmental ones?

What's included

6 videos2 readings2 assignments1 peer review1 discussion prompt

6 videos•Total 48 minutes
  • Introduction to Look into the Future•1 minute
  • Scenarios for Resource Use•9 minutes
  • Scenarios of Metal Demand and Supply and Related Environmental Impacts•11 minutes
  • The Metals Challenge and the Sustainable Development Goals•5 minutes
  • Summary of Look into the Future•4 minutes
  • Scenarios for Resource Use (Additional Material)•14 minutes
2 readings•Total 120 minutes
  • People and the Earth•30 minutes
  • Suggested Readings and Materials•90 minutes
2 assignments•Total 60 minutes
  • Test your knowledge•30 minutes
  • Final Exam•30 minutes
1 peer review•Total 120 minutes
  • Sustainable Development Goals•120 minutes
1 discussion prompt•Total 20 minutes
  • Sustainable Development Goals•20 minutes

Earn a career certificate

Add this credential to your LinkedIn profile, resume, or CV. Share it on social media and in your performance review.

Instructor

Instructor ratings

Instructor ratings

We asked all learners to give feedback on our instructors based on the quality of their teaching style.

4.7 (32 ratings)
Ester van der Voet
Ester van der Voet
Universiteit Leiden
1 Course•7,807 learners

Offered by

Universiteit Leiden

Offered by

Universiteit Leiden

Leiden University is one of Europe's foremost research universities. This prominent position gives our graduates a leading edge and prepares them for careers both within and outside of academia. Leiden University is the oldest university in the Netherlands, founded in 1575. Our motto is: Praesidium Libertatis (Bastion of Liberty) - Freedom of spirit, thought and expression. Leiden University has a campus in Leiden and The Hague, with 7 faculties, 47 Bachelor Programmes, 79 Master Programmes and nearly 30,000 students.

Explore more from Environmental Science and Sustainability

  • Status: Free Trial
    Free Trial
    U

    University of Colorado Boulder

    Sustainability and the Circular Economy

    Course

  • Status: Preview
    Preview
    L

    Lund University

    Circular Economy - Sustainable Materials Management

    Course

  • Status: Free Trial
    Free Trial
    U

    University of Colorado Boulder

    Product Design for the Circular Economy

    Course

  • Status: Free Trial
    Free Trial
    L

    L&T EduTech

    Introduction to Renewable Energy

    Course

Why people choose Coursera for their career

Felipe M.
Learner since 2018
"To be able to take courses at my own pace and rhythm has been an amazing experience. I can learn whenever it fits my schedule and mood."
Jennifer J.
Learner since 2020
"I directly applied the concepts and skills I learned from my courses to an exciting new project at work."
Larry W.
Learner since 2021
"When I need courses on topics that my university doesn't offer, Coursera is one of the best places to go."
Chaitanya A.
"Learning isn't just about being better at your job: it's so much more than that. Coursera allows me to learn without limits."

Learner reviews

4.7

102 reviews

  • 5 stars

    82.85%

  • 4 stars

    10.47%

  • 3 stars

    2.85%

  • 2 stars

    2.85%

  • 1 star

    0.95%

Showing 3 of 102

E
ES
5

Reviewed on Mar 9, 2019

Loved the Dutch approach to design and sustainability!

C
CP
5

Reviewed on Nov 3, 2020

Comprehensive course covering a lot of topics related to circular economies and specifics related to metals and mining.

A
AP
5

Reviewed on May 11, 2020

Great content, great professor. Worth the effort. Looking forward to learning more and be more engaged about the metals challenge and the circular economy

View more reviews
Coursera Plus

Open new doors with Coursera Plus

Unlimited access to 10,000+ world-class courses, hands-on projects, and job-ready certificate programs - all included in your subscription

Learn more

Advance your career with an online degree

Earn a degree from world-class universities - 100% online

Explore degrees

Join over 3,400 global companies that choose Coursera for Business

Upskill your employees to excel in the digital economy

Learn more

Frequently asked questions

To access the course materials, assignments and to earn a Certificate, you will need to purchase the Certificate experience when you enroll in a course. You can try a Free Trial instead, or apply for Financial Aid. The course may offer 'Full Course, No Certificate' instead. This option lets you see all course materials, submit required assessments, and get a final grade. This also means that you will not be able to purchase a Certificate experience.

When you purchase a Certificate you get access to all course materials, including graded assignments. Upon completing the course, your electronic Certificate will be added to your Accomplishments page - from there, you can print your Certificate or add it to your LinkedIn profile.

You will be eligible for a full refund until two weeks after your payment date, or (for courses that have just launched) until two weeks after the first session of the course begins, whichever is later. You cannot receive a refund once you’ve earned a Course Certificate, even if you complete the course within the two-week refund period. See our full refund policy.

Yes. In select learning programs, you can apply for financial aid or a scholarship if you can’t afford the enrollment fee. If fin aid or scholarship is available for your learning program selection, you’ll find a link to apply on the description page.

More questions

Visit the learner help center

Financial aid available,

¹ Some assignments in this course are AI-graded. For these assignments, your data will be used in accordance with Coursera's Privacy Notice.

Coursera Footer

Technical Skills

  • ChatGPT
  • Coding
  • Computer Science
  • Cybersecurity
  • DevOps
  • Ethical Hacking
  • Generative AI
  • Java Programming
  • Python
  • Web Development

Analytical Skills

  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Big Data
  • Business Analysis
  • Data Analytics
  • Data Science
  • Financial Modeling
  • Machine Learning
  • Microsoft Excel
  • Microsoft Power BI
  • SQL

Business Skills

  • Accounting
  • Digital Marketing
  • E-commerce
  • Finance
  • Google
  • Graphic Design
  • IBM
  • Marketing
  • Project Management
  • Social Media Marketing

Career Resources

  • Essential IT Certifications
  • High-Income Skills to Learn
  • How to Get a PMP Certification
  • How to Learn Artificial Intelligence
  • Popular Cybersecurity Certifications
  • Popular Data Analytics Certifications
  • What Does a Data Analyst Do?
  • Career Development Resources
  • Career Aptitude Test
  • Share your Coursera Learning Story

Coursera

  • About
  • What We Offer
  • Leadership
  • Careers
  • Catalog
  • Coursera Plus
  • Professional Certificates
  • MasterTrack® Certificates
  • Degrees
  • For Enterprise
  • For Government
  • For Campus
  • Become a Partner
  • Social Impact
  • Free Courses
  • ECTS Credit Recommendations

Community

  • Learners
  • Partners
  • Beta Testers
  • Blog
  • The Coursera Podcast
  • Tech Blog

More

  • Press
  • Investors
  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Help
  • Accessibility
  • Contact
  • Articles
  • Directory
  • Affiliates
  • Modern Slavery Statement
  • Do Not Sell/Share
Learn Anywhere
Download on the App Store
Get it on Google Play
Logo of Certified B Corporation
© 2025 Coursera Inc. All rights reserved.
  • Coursera Facebook
  • Coursera Linkedin
  • Coursera Twitter
  • Coursera YouTube
  • Coursera Instagram
  • Coursera TikTok
Coursera

Sign up

Learn on your own time from top universities and businesses.

​
​
Between 8 and 72 characters
Your password is hidden
​

or

Already on Coursera?


Having trouble logging in? Learner help center

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA Enterprise and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.