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survival
Big Wall climber
A Token of My Extreme
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Topic Author's Original Post - Nov 12, 2011 - 11:39am PT
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I thought I'd post a specific issue that is real. Not as much fun as a global takeover conspiracy I know but it's one that we can actually do something about.
We've all heard of blood diamonds. But who knew that our cell phones were causing so much suffering in the Congo?
Nokia turns it's head about supply lines while people die by the thousands in the quest for Coltan.
Saw a grueling documentary last night by a Dutch journalist who went to the mines and tried (mostly in vain) to get Nokia to give some answers.
The demand for cell phones and computer chips is helping fuel a bloody civil war in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The offer turned up a few weeks ago on an Internet bulletin board called the Embassy Network. Among the postings about Dutch work visas and Italian pen pals lurked a surprisingly blunt proposal: "How much do you want to offer per kilogram? Please find me at least 100,000 U.S. dollars and I will deliver immediately."
The substance for sale wasn't cocaine or top-grade opium. It was an ore called Columbite-tantalite - coltan for short - one of the world's most sought-after materials. Refine coltan and you get a highly heat-resistant metal powder called tantalum. It sells for $100 a pound, and it's becoming increasingly vital to modern life. For the high-tech industry, tantalum is magic dust, a key component in everything from mobile phones made by Nokia (NOK) and Ericsson and computer chips from Intel (INTC) to Sony (SNE) stereos and VCRs.
Selling coltan is not illegal. Most of the worldwide tantalum supply - valued at as much as $6 billion a year - comes from legitimate mining operations in Australia, Canada and Brazil. But as demand for tantalum took off with the boom of high-tech products in recent years, a new, more sinister market began flourishing in the Democratic Republic of Congo. There, warring rebel groups - many funded and supplied by neighboring Rwanda and Uganda - are exploiting coltan mining to help finance a bloody civil war now in its third year. "There is a direct link between human rights abuses and the exploitation of resources in areas in the DRC occupied by Rwanda and Uganda," says Suliman Baldo, a senior researcher in the Africa division at Human Rights Watch, a New York-based nongovernmental organization that tracks human-rights abuses worldwide.
The slaughter and misery in the Congo has not abated since the country's president, Laurent Kabila, was assassinated in January. (Kabila's son, Joseph, was quickly appointed the new head of state.) Human Rights Watch researchers, working with monitors in the Congo, estimate that at least 10,000 civilians have been killed and 200,000 people have been displaced in northeastern Congo since June 1999. Rebels have driven farmers off their coltan-rich land and attacked villages in a civil war raging, in part, over control of strategic mining areas. The Ugandan and Rwandan rebels "are just helping themselves," Baldo says. The mining by the rebels is also causing environmental destruction. In particular, endangered gorilla populations are being massacred or driven out of their natural habitat as the miners illegally plunder the ore-rich lands of the Congo's protected national parks.
The link between the bloodshed and coltan is causing alarm among high-tech manufacturers. Slowly they are beginning to grapple with the possibility that their products may contain the tainted fruits of civil war. A similar controversy, after all, wracked the diamond industry in the late 1990s, when global demand for the gems helped finance civil wars in Sierra Leone, Angola and Liberia. Since then, the international community has clamped down on the diamond trade, imposing tougher import and export regulations.
But with tantalum, such regulations may be difficult to enforce. The market for the metal is based on secretive and convoluted trade links subject to few international regulations, and the ore is not sold on regulated metals exchanges.
By the way, the article quoted is ten years old. There has been a decade of war and suffering since then. The documentary was new.
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pyro
Big Wall climber
Calabasas
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Nov 12, 2011 - 11:51am PT
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a few years ago i shattered my wrist and Tantalum is what they used to bolt it back together. i have Tan in my wrist!
so is the medical industry just as bad as the cell phone?
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Reilly
Mountain climber
The Other Monrovia- CA
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Nov 12, 2011 - 12:01pm PT
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Yes, this is an old sad story with no foreseeable outcome that benefits anyone
other than the chip industry and China. It is rather disingenuous, or naive
at best, to call those groups 'rebels'. They are mercenary criminal gangs
who cynically wrap themselves in the cloak of partisanship. My wife's family
has literally a hundred years' of experience in Africa some of which I have
absorbed. I'm also afraid to say I've also absorbed their sentiment that
most of the continent continues its downward spiral. The Congo undoubtedly
heads the race to Dante's Seventh Circle. The Chinese are being very resolute
in profiting, if not abetting this. The only bright side of this is that
they will abet stability if it aids them. Unfortunately stability for them
only means empowering the mob they see as the one most likely to endure.
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survival
Big Wall climber
A Token of My Extreme
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Topic Author's Reply - Nov 12, 2011 - 12:02pm PT
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I don't know about that pyro. The documentary focused specifically on electronics, cell phones in particular.
Like I said, it's way fresher than this 10 yr old article. I'll fish up something more current.
The first wake-up call to the high-tech industry came in April when the United Nations issued a damning report on the "illegal exploitation of natural resources and other forms of wealth of the Democratic Republic of the Congo." After six months of field investigations, a panel of experts in the region assembled by the U.N. Security Council reported its findings.
Among the most alarming of the report's allegations was that Rwandan, Ugandan and Burundian rebels had looted and smuggled thousands of tons of coltan from the Congo into their countries to export to the global market, using the profits to finance their militias. Indeed, the official statistics provided by these countries' governments - which many human-rights observers believe hide large amounts of black-market trading - show that Uganda and Rwanda dramatically increased the export of coltan following their occupation of northeastern Congo. For example, Uganda reported 2.5 tons of coltan exports a year before the conflict broke out in 1997. In 1999, the volume exploded to nearly 70 tons.
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happiegrrrl
Trad climber
www.climbaddictdesigns.com
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Nov 12, 2011 - 12:03pm PT
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Very interesting article, and that you note it is a decade old AFTER the read was poignant in that it boldfaces the fact that we, as a species, are pretty despicable.
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Jingy
climber
Somewhere out there
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Nov 12, 2011 - 12:05pm PT
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Its almost to the point that every piece of convenience that America craves is tied to all kinds of oppression, pain and death.
I can't wait to find out that my mac has blood all over it.
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survival
Big Wall climber
A Token of My Extreme
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Topic Author's Reply - Nov 12, 2011 - 12:17pm PT
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The U.N. report documents the rebel groups' use of forced labor, illegal monopolies and civilian murder in their high-stakes game to extract this valuable resource. These accusations have not been taken lightly; several members of the U.N. panel that prepared the report have since received death threats. Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi have issued protests to the United Nations over the report, claiming it to be inaccurate and unfounded.
The pillaging of the Congo's natural resources is exacting a devastating human and economic toll, says Leonard She Okitundu, the Congo's minister for foreign affairs and international cooperation. He told the United Nations Security Council in early May that "a consensus was clearly emerging in the council and in the international community on the links between the shameless looting of Congolese natural wealth and the massacres of the Congolese people." The fighting, he reported, has led to "assassinations of civilians, deportations, torture, rape and deliberate spreading of HIV/AIDS," as well as the displacement of millions of refugees.
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Chaz
Trad climber
greater Boss Angeles area
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Nov 12, 2011 - 12:26pm PT
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The Occupy Wall Street guys need to read this.
Here, and in other advanced countries, we have markets - like Wall Street, Chicago, etc. - where commodities are traded peacefully.
Do away with those markets here, and the result may be what they have in The Congo.
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Sierra Ledge Rat
Social climber
Retired to Appalachia
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Nov 12, 2011 - 12:30pm PT
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Nokia turns it's head about supply lines while people die by the thousands in the quest for Coltan.
I'm okay with that.
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Dave
Mountain climber
the ANTI-fresno
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Nov 12, 2011 - 07:38pm PT
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Someone paying $100k for a kilogram of coltan got ripped off.
The current spot price of cobalt is about $17 per pound. The current spot price of tantulum is $50-60 per pound.
1 kilogram = 2.2 pounds.
The refining cost is not two orders of magnitude, not that I'm an expert in rare metals.
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Klimmer
Mountain climber
San Diego
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Nov 12, 2011 - 07:41pm PT
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Thanks for posting this.
Blood Diamonds. Blood Minerals. Blood elements. Blood natural resources, whatever you want to call them . . .
It really doesn't matter. The Corporate world exploits these regions were they are killing themselves in civil wars, and the companies profit by the instability of these regions that have vast natural resources. They have a vested interest in keeping these regions unstable politically. The price of the resource is far less than it would be, than if they had to care about environmental laws, safety laws, mining labor unions, and established ethical mining practices, and governments that actually cared about their citizens.
Nokia et al., they will not release their trade secret supply lines because they know they are guilty. Most of the world dosen't know about the problem so ignorance is bliss.
More reason to get out to the asteroid belt and mine the nearly limitless resouces there. No one is gonna miss a few asteriods and the bad environmental ethics, damage to mother Earth, and political strife can all be avoided. Besides, think of the adventure that ET mining would bring. Way cool.
“The asteroids that are potentially the most hazardous because they can closely approach the Earth are also the objects that could be most easily exploited for raw materials. These raw materials could be used in developing the space structures and in generating the rocket fuel that will be required to explore and colonize our solar system in the twenty-first century. By closely investigating the compositions of asteroids, intelligent choices can be made as to which ones offer the richest supplies of raw materials. It has been estimated that the mineral wealth resident in the belt of asteroids between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter would be equivalent to about 100 billion dollars for every person on Earth today. “
http://ssd.jpl.nasa.gov/?why_asteroids
One Small Metallic NEA: Amun
• 3554 Amun: smallest known M-type NEA
• Amun is 2000 m in diameter
• Contains about 30x the total amount of
metals mined over human history
• Contains 3x1016 g of iron
• Contains over 1012 g of PGMs with Earthsurface
market value of about $40 T
http://ngec.arc.nasa.gov/files/ngec_proceedings/speakers/Lewis_Asteroids.pdf
Mining The Sky: Untold Riches From The Asteroids, Comets, And Planets [Paperback] John S. Lewis
http://www.amazon.com/Mining-Sky-Untold-Asteroids-Planets/dp/0201328194/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1295314967&sr=1-1
This is what we should do. We can do a World of Good. So why aren't we?
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Dave
Mountain climber
the ANTI-fresno
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Nov 12, 2011 - 07:44pm PT
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By the way, large mining companies are building operations in the Congo and elsewhere in Africa that add value to the local communities. Roads, jobs, clean water, medicine, aids treatment, on and on.
The artisinal and "blood diamond" type miners that financed conflict in middle Africa don't exactly do that and kill each other for the chance to mine a little deposit.
All African mining is not evil. People are trying to make a difference, but it takes a huge amount of money to build the infrastructure necessary just to move in and out of the country. Yet we brand the companies that take the risk "evil corporations."
Edit: As usual, Klimmer has no idea what he is talking about.
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Klimmer
Mountain climber
San Diego
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Nov 12, 2011 - 07:52pm PT
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Dave,
Yes I do.
Many very good articles on the topic go into great detail regarding the problem.
You must be in the mining industry.
Lol.
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WBraun
climber
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Nov 12, 2011 - 08:47pm PT
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The problems in our world are never outside of ourselves.
The problem begins with us .....
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Hummerchine
Trad climber
East Wenatchee, WA
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Nov 12, 2011 - 08:59pm PT
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The problem on earth that you discuss sounds hideous...but knowing almost nothing about mining, yet understanding math and finance quite well...
I just don't see any way that mining asteroids will ever be remotely close to cost effective in our lifetimes.
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Dave
Mountain climber
the ANTI-fresno
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Nov 12, 2011 - 09:04pm PT
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Klimmer -
Of course I work in the mining industry. Have you been to Africa or Indonesia and met the people running the mines? Or seen the communities they built? Or the wages they pay that are 3 times the prevailing local average?
Colorado School of Mines has a space mining group that was involved in the Mars program.
Mining metals from space won't make sense for a looong time. The cost to launch a man into space via Soyuz is $65MM. That's ~ $325,000 per pound just to get to the space station and back. The current price of a few select metals follows, cost of production is much less:
Copper: $3.50 / pound
Nickel: $8.25 / pound
Aluminum: $0.96 / pound
Zinc: $0.86 / pound
Cobalt: $15 / pound
Moly: $13.50 / pound
Tantalum: $ 40 / pound
Unless the cost of production becomes multiple orders of magnitude more expensive, space mining will not make sense. By the time inflation is that bad, Occupy Wall Street will be a distant memory of the good ol' days.
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Moof
Big Wall climber
Orygun
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Nov 12, 2011 - 09:59pm PT
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People fight and kill over valuable commodities, news at 11.
Blaming the companies that use them is off base. Sort of like trying to blame ford for all the wars and oppressive regimes associated with petroleum based fuels.
Simply put, tantalum caps are one of the staples of any compact electronic device. Larger devices can use electrolytic caps which have a much lower capacitance per unit volume (and are cheaper too), and also tend to dry out resulting in dead computers/inverters/etc after 5-10 years. Your cell phone would be dramatically larger (2-3x) without Tantalum caps. So long as there is capitalism, there will be people at the fringes who will behave badly to make a buck, get used to it.
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