Concert Hall - Aarhus
19 - 21 June 2012
With the two main messages
- Commercializing technology possibilities that match industrial needs
- Smart solutions for improving the European innovation environment

Raw materials are a critical input for the European economy, but the region is often dependent on imports or vulnerable to declining supplies.
To prevent this becoming a bottleneck for economic growth, Europe needs a fourfold strategy. Alternative sources for materials should be found – many of which may already exist in Europe, and provide opportunities for renewed and environmental sensitive extraction agency. Alternatives to rare earth metals need to be found, and material usage in general should become more efficient. Recycling is also of critical importance, as well as a significant business opportunity.
At Industrial Technologies 2012, Professor Pär Weihed of (Luleå University) will argue in the session "Ensuring the Availability of Raw Materials" that Europe does not lack reserves of critical materials, but that political will is required to support their extraction.
Dr Thomas Scheiter (Siemens) will reveal in the workshop "Innovative Materials Based on Less-Common Elements, Environment and Processes", how his company is responding to material scarcity, by developing alternative components such a magnets which use substantially lower quantities of rare materials like dysprosium.
Moreover, Professor Armin Reller (Augsburg University) argues that, while facing raw materials scarcity, resource management, resource efficiency and resource strategy are crucial concepts for the design and implementation of new functional materials.































