EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Pandora's Box: Digging the Earth, Killing the Future
Landgrabbing and mineral extraction spell disaster for Earth
The extent and the scale of the increase in world mineral extraction over the last 10 years is staggering, according to a new report. Across Latin America, Asia and Africa, more and more community lands, rivers and ecosystems are being despoiled, displaced and devoured by mining activities. The rights of farming and indigenous communities are increasingly ignored in the race to grab land and water. Each wave of new extractive technologies requires ever more water to wrench the material from its source. The hunger for these materials is a growing threat to the necessities for life: water, fertile soil and food. The implications are obvious, if not widely ignored by the industrial and economic powers that profit from such activities.
Kennecotts Bingham Canyon Mine. (Photograph from Thinkstock.) The report, Opening Pandora's Box - A New Wave of Land Grabbing for the Extractive Industries and The Devastating Impact on Earth, was spearheaded by the Gaia foundation and supported by various groups including Friends of the Earth International, Grain, Oilwatch and Navdanya in India.
For example, the report cites that over the last ten years, iron ore production is up by 180%; cobalt by 165%; lithium by 125%, and coal by 44%. The increase in prospecting has also grown exponentially, which means this massive acceleration in extraction will continue if concessions are granted as freely as they are now.
"We live on a beautiful and wondrous planet," write the authors in the executive summary to the report, "the only one we know of in our cosmos. She suddenly feels very small and vulnerable in the face of the momentum of destruction we have unleashed on her, through our conscious and unconscious actions. We must recognise this reality: if we continue in our current direction, our children will be left to clean up an increasingly barren and unstable planet, littered with toxic wastelands and a huge scarcity of water, which we would have left in our wake."
"We live on a beautiful and wondrous planet - the only one we know of in our cosmos. She suddenly feels very small and vulnerable in the face of the momentum of destruction we have unleashed on her, through our conscious and unconscious actions."
Environment editor at The Guardian, Jon Vidal, digested the report, and added:
Africa is the epicentre of the mining industry's search for minerals. Of the 10 biggest mining deals to be completed last year, seven were in Africa, according to Ernst & Young. Mining group Anglo American has earmarked $8bn (£5bn) for new platinum, diamond, iron ore and coal projects on the continent, and Brazil's Vale has said it plans to spend more than $12bn over the next five years in Africa. [...]
China, which has invested heavily in African mines, now sucks up much of the world's mineral resources. According to the report, it uses 53% of the world's cement, 47% of its iron ore, 46% of its coal and more than 40% of the world's steel, lead, zinc and aluminium. However, it re-exports much of this in the form of finished products for world markets.
The loss of enormous quantities of soil, and the eviction of people to make way for large-scale extraction now threaten to make millions of people landless and hungry, a recipe for social problems, says the report.
Water could well be a factor in limiting the extraction of minerals in future. Most mining companies have said they are already experiencing shortages. If demand continues to grow at the same rate that it has in the last decade, industry demands for fresh water are expected to grow from 4,500bn cubic metres today to 6,900bn cubic metres in 2030.
"Humans have almost cleared the surface of the earth. Now all efforts are geared towards going beneath the surface. Large-scale mining is now targeting all parts of the planet," said Gathuri Mburu, co-ordinator of the African Biodiversity Network.
###
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...

36 Comments so far
Show AllAll modern technologies require the exploitation of the Earth's bones, muscle and flesh, no matter how "green".
The only technologies that are sustainable are the ancient and indigenous uses of local renewable resources, such as clay, fiber, wood and stone.
In truth, no one knows what the "right" human population for the Earth might be. But we do know what technologies "work" and which don't (including all the so-called "green" technologies).
The only question is: do you want to just cynically complain about the world or stand on your feet and re-learn how to live on it?
The article cites the report: "We must recognise this reality: if we continue in our current direction, our children will be left to clean up an increasingly barren and unstable planet, littered with toxic wastelands and a huge scarcity of water, which we would have left in our wake." That is a gross UNDERSTATEMENT.
If we continue in our current direction, WE WILL ALL BE DEAD.
We need to FACE THE TRUTH and STOP insane extractive devastation for production and profit.
Look at this report on ocean acidification:
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2012/03/ocean-acidification-peak/
webwalk,
Thanks for the linked article on ocean acidification. It only takes a slight acquaintance with the history of Life to understand the gravity of what scientists are telling us (from the Wired article):
We're on a course for conditions not seen since before the greatest extinction event ever, the end-Permian, "when life nearly died." The warning could not possibly be more emphatic or dire. You are right to question whether future generations can survive to resent their inheritance.
ScienceDaily and Climate Progress also published articles about the recent acidification study:
Intercontinental Cry http://intercontinentalcry.org/topics/evictions/
Cultural Survival... http://www.culturalsurvival.org/take-action/ethiopia-stop-land-grabbing-...
AVAAZ If you can do networking and encourage others to - never underestimate the collective value of millions of small actions of awareness.
Absolutely one of the strongest measures of the evil of money that has NO intrinsic value, just pretty pieces of paper of 'authority' or 'permission' to blast the planet.
We don't need condoms. We need the wisdom that is still in our DNA but that our culture has obliterated.
When you speak of farming, you're thinking of industrial agriculture. Read the next post about the Kogi of Colombia, who have been farming the same precarious fields for 500 years. Ironically, at the top of the world, they're experiencing the effects - not of their land use - but of our own, as the mountain snows disappear, the rivers dry up, and the mountain flora shrivels away.
The Kogi are the direct descendants of the Tairona civilization. The Tairona culture flourished in Northern Colombia around 1,000 AD. Kogi society has changed little in the past five centuries. Fundamental to their survival is the maintenance of physical separation between their world and our own. The Kogi do not allow anyone into their land. They are very protective of their sacred space and the dense jungle is not kind to tourists. Very few Colombians dare enter into their territory.
The Kogi are unique among the world’s indigenous cultures because the Spaniards never conquered them. They are said to have memory of the beginning of time and remember the rampage the conquistadors brought to their region in 1498. The Kogi represent the most complete surviving civilization of pre-Colombian America. They are not hunter-gatherers or a wandering tribe; they are a nation whose fields have been continuously cultivated for more than a thousand years.
The Kogi believe they are the "Elder Brothers," the guardians of life on Earth. Through their rituals and meditation they keep the world in balance.
In 1988 the Kogi allowed a BBC journalist, Alain Ereira, to film a documentary about their culture. This was a historic event. No western journalist has been allowed to return since and the Kogi remained silent observing the ecological destruction of their sacred mountain.
http://www.linktv.org/globalspirit/kogi
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5Z-NDNHw6wQ
But the Kogi are concerned about what is happening to their sacred Mountain. This is their warning and message to the "Younger Brother":
"If the Younger Brother keeps cutting down all the trees, there will be fires because the sun will heat the earth.... Younger Brother, stop doing it. You have already taken so much. The Mother told us how to live properly and how to think well. We’re still here and we haven’t forgotten anything."
"The earth is decaying, it is losing its strength because they have taken away much petrol, coal, many minerals. Younger Brother thinks, Yes! Here I am! I know much about the universe! But this knowing is learning to destroy the world, to destroy everything, all humanity.... The Mother is suffering, she is ill."
"Does the Younger Brother understand what he has done? Does he?"
"The world doesn’t have to end; it could go on, but unless we stop violating the earth and nature, depleting The Great Mother of her material energy, her organs, her vitality; unless people stop working against the Great Mother, the world will not last."
We don't need to accept any "eco-fantasy" about "noble savages" since there has been nearly a half century of research since anthropologist Marshall Sahlins spoke about The Original Affluent Society in 1966. Much recent paleontological research, as well, has demonstrated that humans were much healthier before the beginning of the agricultural revolution which was the seed for what we now call "civilization", and that after the shift - everywhere it occurred in the world - human health declined and environmental destruction began, sometimes to the point of the extinction of the human society.
You make the common mistake of generalizing from anecdotal information about modern indigenous peoples who could not be studied without being impacted by the culture that studies them. There are, however, dozens of uncontacted tribes in the Amazon alone which live with so little impact on their environment that they are all but undetectable. Once those cultures become polluted by modernity, the destruction inevitably begins.
What you call "human history" is merely the history of civilization - the last 1% of human evolutionary time. We have a great deal to learn from "primitive" peoples, but the kind of arrogance that you display prevents learning. There is nothing "abusive" about pointing out a lie. And there is nothing more abusive than living a lie.