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One definition states that light industry is a "manufacturing activity that uses moderate amounts of partially processed materials to produce items of relatively high value per unit weight".[2]
Characteristics
Compared to heavy industries, light industries require fewer raw materials, space, and power. While light industry typically causes little pollution, particularly compared to heavy industry, some light industries can cause significant pollution or risk of contamination. For example, electronics manufacturing, itself often a light industry, can create potentially harmful levels of lead or chemical wastes in soil without proper handling of solder and waste products (such as cleaning and degreasing agents used in the manufacture).
^Grinin, Leonid E. (2020). "Kondratieff Waves, Technological Modes, and the Theory of Production Revolutions". In Grinin, Leonid E.; Korotayev, Andrey V. (eds.). History & Mathematics: Investigating Past and Future. Volgograd: Издательство "Учитель". p. 53. ISBN9785705759101. Retrieved 4 July 2022. First, there appeared an industrial factory sector (mainly light industry), then the branches of the first processing cycle (steelmaking and iron smelting) and transport, and then the second processing cycle (manufacturing, chemical industry, and heavy engineering) develop especially rapidly. [...] This trend was common both in England and in other industrialized countries [...].