From the Geological Society of America: Critical Minerals Ignite Geopolitical Storm
For Immediate Release 10 October 2011 GSA Release No. 11-66
The clean energy economy of the future hinges on a lot of things, chief among them the availability of the scores of rare earth minerals and other elements used to make everything from photovoltaic panels and cellphone displays to the permanent magnets in cutting edge new wind generators. And right out of the gate trouble is brewing over projected growth in demand for these minerals and the security of their supplies.
Last year, for instance, China restricted the export of neodymium, which is used in wind generators. The move was ostensibly to direct the supplies to toward a massive wind generation project within China. The effect, however, is to create a two-tiered price for neodymium: one inside China and another, higher price, for the rest of the world, explained economics professor Roderick Eggert of the Colorado School of Mines. The result could be that China not only will control the neodymium supply, but the manufacture of neodymium technology as well.
The geopolitical implications of critical minerals have started bringing together scientists, economists and policy makers who are trying to cut a path through the growing thicket of challenges. In that spirit, on Monday, October 10, 2011, Eggert and other professors will be presenting their research alongside high-level representatives from the U.S. Congress and Senate, the Office of the President of the U.S., the U.S. Geological Survey, in a session at the meeting of the Geological Society of America in Minneapolis.
Among the basics that need to be grasped to understand the current state of affairs is how rare these minerals and elements really are. Some are plentiful, but only found in rare places or are difficult to extract. Indium, for instance, is a byproduct of zinc mining and extraction. It is not economically viable to extract unless zinc is being sought in the same ore, Eggert explained, Others are just plain scarce, like rhenium and tellurium, which only exist in very small amounts in the Earth’s crust.
There are basically two responses to this sort of situation: use less of these minerals or improve the extraction of them from other ores in other parts of the world. The latter would seem to be where most people are heading.
“China’s efforts to restrict exports of mineral commodities garnered the attention of Congress and highlighted the need for the United States to assess the state of the Nation’s mineral policies and examine opportunities to produce rare earths and other strategic and critical minerals domestically,” reads the session abstract of Kathleen Benedetto of the Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral Resources, Committee on Natural Resources, U.S. House of Representatives. “Nine bills have been introduced in the House and Senate to address supply disruptions of rare earths and other important mineral commodities.”
Benedetto will be explaining the meaning and status of those bills, and what it will take to get them signed into law.
“Deposits of rare earth elements and other critical minerals occur throughout the Nation,” reads the abstract for another prominent session presenter: Marcia McNutt, director of the U.S. Geological Survey. She will be putting the current events in the larger historical perspective of mineral resource management, which has been the USGS’s job for more than 130 years. “The definition of ‘a critical mineral or material’ is extremely time dependent, as advances in materials science yield new products and the adoption of new technologies result in shifts in both supply and demand.”
The President’s Office of Science and Technology Policy has answered the call as well. Cyrus Wadia will be presenting a five-point strategy to begin addressing the matter. The first point is to mitigating long term risks associated with the use of critical materials. The second, diversify supplies of raw materials. Third, to promote a domestic supply chain for areas of strategic importance like clean energy. Fourth, inform decision makers; and fifth, prepare the workforce of the next generation.
TomG, I am a registered engineer in CA. long since retired. When I took (and passed) the EIT test in CA in 1963, 19% passed. When I took (and passed) the test for my professional engineering (civil) license in 1967, 26% passed.
When the state of CA changed to national testing standards, in 1975, the percentage passing became 75%, for both of those tests.
I have done a lot of prospecting and weekend mining in CA. Some pollution is inevitable, particularly when dust/soil erosion is concerned. The EPA is a monster and rogue organization, with activists knowing little of actual science.
When an exceptionally bright grandson of mine took an interest in physics, I was delighted . . . except that the high school he attends had and has no teacher qualified to teach physics.
The concept that every student has to have a passing grade has about ruined the teaching of physics, chemistry, and biology.
Ref – Gail Combs says:
October 10, 2011 at 11:54 am
“National Sovereignty”, “International Law”, The United Nations Charter, The International This, That, Etc., it’s a bunch of global political polution (aka Global PP). And some people sitting on Wall Street wonder why we still have war. Hummmm… When we forget about Human Nature and think we can just burn our way to Utopia someone is going to get wet.
PS: Never trust a politician! And, never elect one more than twice to the same office! It’s also very dangerous to give a brand new Research Scientist fresh out of school with a PhD in Primitive Basket Weaving a grant from the NSF for a $Trillion and telling him he’s got to use it all in one year if he expects to get any more. Will we ever learn? Seems not.
October 3, 2011
Molycorp Set to Announce a Rare Earth Rediscovery
By KEITH BRADSHER
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/04/business/molycorp-to-announce-rare-earth-deposit-at-california-site.html
“An all-but-forgotten rocky outcropping in Southern California contains ore that could help break the country’s dependence on China for certain types of rare earth metals, according to the only American producer of rare earths.”
Brazil’s Vale Discovers Rare Earths in Amazon
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204612504576609413994133684.html
By DIANA KINCH
OCTOBER 3, 2011
“RIO DE JANEIRO—Brazilian miner Vale SA has discovered deposits of rare-earth minerals at its giant Salobo copper-mine project at Carajas in Para state, similar to quality at some Australian deposits, a leading Brazilian minerals researcher said late last week.”