Jake Larsen
WKR
*laughs in lifelong industrial distribution career*
Society always loudly condemns visible resource extraction projects while consuming resource-heavy digital services whose supply chains require the very mining being denounced.
Many of those opposed to projects like these are equally guilty of necessitating the economic reality and feasibility through their digital consumption. Using things like the internet, social media, OnX, Google Earth, Garmin GPS, etc. all require vast amounts of data which must be stored somewhere after being built somewhere. Copper, nickel, and cobalt all play heavy into the infrastructure buildout of these services.
The entire world is scrambling like mad to capitalize and secure every source possible at all costs with the AI race ramping exponentially year over year.
I am opposed to the location selection of this project, but this is the reality and consequence of all these digital tools that everyone, including hunters and fishermen, depend on these days.
These are but the first of many projects that will forever reshape the environment for the worse in the coming years. If you saw the boardroom forecasts of many of these companies involved in these types of projects, their projections and resource inputs increase exponentially year over year for the next two decades.
Buckle up boys, it’s not going to get any better as many of these projects are quickly labeled mandatory for national security once approved. Very hard to stop after that point short of all out revolution or a miracle.
Nailed it. The frustrating thing about this is that there’s very sound logic that securing these resources IS a national security issue. Two things can be true at once…there’s no doubt that inside connects will be leveraged by politicians securing some of these contracts. But it’s also true that rare earth mineral/metal independence is going to be just as critical as energy independence in the short/medium term future.
Leaves me very torn as an American who believes America should be securing American interests. But also someone who loves pristine and wild places.
It’s real easy to say “not here!” Which tends to be my first reaction also. But if not here, then where? We have to mine where the minerals/metals exist, or else we have to let other countries do it for us. Word on the street is that Department of War is about to spend a LOT of money on this problem, since raw material is their bottleneck for rebuilding our stockpiles.
That being said, if what others have said is true, and a Chilean company is lined up for this particular mine with plans to smelt in China, then the argument of securing the supply chain seems more like a scare tactic in order to get public support.
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