The True Cost of Lithium Mining | True Cost | Insider News
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- Опубліковано 12 лип 2023
- With demand for electric batteries sky high, mining companies are making their move on the salt flats of the Andes, where over half of the world's known reserves of lithium are stored. But local people are concerned about damage to their scarce water supplies and that they will not benefit from the white gold rush occurring in their own backyard.
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I love how all the 'green' technology is never truly 'green'. Not even close.
no emerging technology is perfect, people scoffed at the first cars too, and those people were proven really wrong as you are
It’s not green you can argue it’s worse but people don’t see it if it’s further down the chain electric is not a visible as a liquid gas
@@bryannonya9769 LOL You really have missed the plot haven't you? Do you see how destructive to these people this kind of mining is? Do you have any idea of how destructive mining cobalt, a component of Lion batteries is? Are you aware of how much coal is burned to power these vehicles? Or are you just obsessed with drinking the kool aid?
How can you 'love' that?? Or do you mean that you like the idea that people having misconceptions?
Through time electric cars offsets its production. It take about 18 months or even less depending on the electrical grid.
No, green technology is not perfect but it’s far less harmful compared to the old fossil fuel technology.
Everyone is focused on electric cars, but what about the lithium batteries in disposable vapes? People throw thousands of them away every day, not to mention all the other electronics with batteries too.
Theyre in everything. I have a bag for all used batteries to go to the hazmat place.
they use them for vapes helps keep the environment good and removing of excess people
Kind of a silly comparison by weight alone, but the problem of waste is worth pointing out regardless
@@version1.27very valid point
How about all the lithium batteries in portable battery banks, electric shavers, computer mice, video game controllers? Everything really, but using lithium is better than one time use batteries in all these small devices, including vapes.
To use valuable drinking water in such a arid and scarce area for lithium mining is so absurd. Thank you for sharing this info.
Well you need to show them big bad mining companies! Throw away what ever device you used to make that comment. You know since it’s made from lithium from that mine. Also you need to make sure you throw away any battery powered devices in your home. (Same mine).
What about water consumption for beef? You need about 4000 gallons of water for one kilo beef, in a tesla is about 30 kilo lithium for 1000 gallons. What about that?
@@tinoe.94 - thats an interesting comparison. Food vs raw material. I know cattle farming is also done in areas where it causes a lot of adverse and destructive side effects. Tropical rain forest in Brazil for instance.
You got a point there.
Well, also using water for agriculture in a desert is also pretty dumb. At least that lithium can be used for something useful, unlike the few tomatos and quinoa, the mining companies should just hire the locals, so they have good paying jobs, and ensure that they have access to clean drinking water in their homes.
Well, also using water for agriculture in a desert is also pretty dumb. At least that lithium can be used for something useful, unlike the few tomatos and quinoa, the mining companies should just hire the locals, so they have good paying jobs, and ensure that they have access to clean drinking water in their homes.
*Creates a new problem while trying to solve an old problem*
Hybrid vehicles are the only answer to saving climate crisis. Just need a mixture of both sides to contribute
@@jorgecrawford7419 they are not the only answer and the process to make an electric car is mega-mining lithium, copper and other metals, not to mention the huge contamination that process leaves behind. Not only that, the demand for silicon, rubber and palstic will skyrocket, along side the deman for petroleum and its derivates. Not to mention the already short tight supply of energy (electricity) and the infrastructure and logistics needed to supply electric cars. This problem will only get worse and worse.
@@aleksandarmiljesic68 & limited fossil fuels are?? I do agree, the process to manufacture a fully electric automobile isn’t to eco-friendly, but neither is traditional internal-combustion process either. We must meet halfway
@@jorgecrawford7419 first of fossil fuels are not "limited" (yet), every month or so new deposits are discovered to be exploited, specially since petroleum is derived from decomposing organic matter, and today petroleum reserves are estimated to last for another 50 years, thats excluding non discovered deposits.
The entire process, infrastructure and logistics for building and mantaining an electric car running is far from "eco-friendly", even further away than todays ICEs. I dont see why we "must" meet halfway, climate has been changing since the earth was formed over 4.4 Billion years ago, nothing we do will stop climate from changing.
But, if it gives you some piece of mind, there are car companies out there developing synthetic and alternative fuels that work well with the modern ICEs. Porsche has been testing synthetic fuels and the tests are giving good results, they recently opened a plant in Chile to further develop this fuels. Other companies like Toyota, Hyundai, BMW and General Motors (to name a few) are investing in Hydrogen Fuel Cell technology. Koenigsegg developed an ICE with virtually no carbon emissions, producing super and hyper car performance in a small, compact, low consumption 3-cylinder engine.
The technology is being deveolped and the money is moving. But i can assure you, the downsides of the increasing mining activities vastly overcome the benefits of going "eco-friendly" with Lithium batteries.
@@jorgecrawford7419lies
produce small, light cars, with small engines, this is a solution.
producing 500hp electric cars is not a solution.
Renewable energy doesnt address the problem of consumerism and western throw away culture...without solving that first, Renewable energy means little...
True, we need to push corporations to support “right to repair”.
Endless profit and it's enabler - fractional reserve banking, e.g. debt is the actual problem. New loans or economic growth can never stop: if it does, the whole (pick your word) goes tumbling...
If people werent like that corporations wouldn't make money
The individual is the one that chooses whether to buy or not.
@@fishy2939simple: they go back to the stone age
They don't care as long as they have a pocket full of money.
And we dont care as long as we can leave comments on our lithium battary powered devices.
every human reacts to money
You can bet that the elite trade in gold standard. Fiat and digital currency is the easiky erased play money for the plebian class.
@@Selahaddin33 sorry lad, my battery does not weigh 2000 pounds
That’s really it! Same for the shareholders!
I feel it would be quite easy for these mining companies to ensure water facility for these tiny local communities in the desert!
No, it's not possible. If they draw fresh water faster than it replenishes, the water table gradually drops. Then they have to drill deeper wells to reach water. That can't go on forever. The only way to ensure locals have enough water is to not extract it faster than it replenishes. They were already caught extracting more brine than was authorized. You think they won't do the same with fresh water?
Never mind. That's a stupid question. Even if they do abide by the established limits, it still won't be sustainable.
I would be surprised if pro EV people solve the water use problem by paying criminals or terrorists to kill farmers like the one shown in this video.
The process of evaporating the water from the brine likely produces enough fresh drinking water and water for their operation. All that has to be done is to trap it with a clear membrane and channel the condensed liquid down the side. They do this all the time in smaller scales. Perhaps having many smaller brine tanks is the solution.
He's right, it is easy, and definitely possible. Look up "solar desalination" and you will find all sorts of small scale examples. Throw massive green houses over these fields and there will be literal rivers of water as a byproduct.
Of course, capitalism doesn't work this way. There's no reason for a CEO to spend money doing the right thing, when he can be exploitive, and make far greater profits. We have allowed 1% of the population to control 99% of the world's wealth; truly think about what that means. Wealth is a closed system, and the only reason so few are so massively rich, is because so many are desperately poor.
The chinese and russia don't care about their own people why would they care about bolivians?
This is the main problem when you compare "green" tech vs oil/gas etc. You have to include ALL of the production chain, including the mineral chase around the world. Lithium is just one of the minerals requiered. So much for the green revolution.
You are 100% right. At the same time, studies that included all these factors showed that electric cars are still more environmentally friendly than ICE. Also keep in mind that after all this lithium is mined, it can be recycled again and again
The farmers very first words were straight to the point and I applaud it.
It’s too bad they couldn’t catch the water as it evaporates to store for locals. Water is so precious especially in regions like this
Also, a passive solar greenhouse distillation system would greatly increase the amount of evaporation.
And it wouldn't have to be a large set of greenhouses. A small operation would produce millions of litres a day.
@@drmodestoesq that's a good idea
@@jeffbybee5207good but expensive one. Unfortunately, those companies only speak money
It's not that they can't, it's that they won't.
@@roxylius7550 I'd wouldn't agree with the expensive part. Just a few acres of greenhouses. Or some other passive solar tech. It would be dirt cheap to assemble.
But we all know these mining companies. They won't spend a green penny if they can avoid it.
And then big brother will come out with a story on how they have to “rescue” them in “exchange” of commodities
If Chile ever gave the contracts for that mining to Chinese over U.S corporations. Then those mines are going to suddenly need some American democratic intervention.
Would love to see what’s going on in Africa with Lithium mining…
Cobalt
You idiots are all missing the point, even drilling for oil have been devastating to the environment don't let this propaganda video fool you! In the not too distant future our civilization really needs to get off fossil fuels, whether you guys like it or not!
@@francismarion6400 Which is used to clean fossil fuels and has been for decades for batteries came along.
much the same backhanders for the rich
No doubt just as bad!
Nothing in this video is a surprise. There is no free lunch.
exactly. As important as it is to get off fossil fuels, buying a 120kWh SUV isn't going to save the planet.
"green energy" destroy nature? oh wow!
Nothing is without environmental impact but yes... The children mining cobalt and other rare-earths would like to have a word too!
Almost like there is no "free lunch"
Meanwhile coal and oil and natural gas is so clean, correct?
@@boblatkey7160 they're both bad. The End.
@boblatkey7160 China builds coal plants like we build Starbucks.
I’m absolutely fine with internal combustion. Very little emissions these days
thank you for the input peter
Still a significant amount of emissions, and there are other problems with ICE other than emissions. Overall, it seems EVs are still better even taking into account some of the environmental damage the production causes
This has been known for YEARS.....thanks for finally catching up to everyone...
What!?!? Electric vehicles and batteries are made out of limited resources just like gas powered vehicles!?!? No way!!! Thanks for this hugely informative article that definitely told us something we didn't know!
Best comment of the day!
The scenary and landscapes captured in this video are remarkably beautiful. I hope that the mining companies, in addition to making sure the communities are cared for, will not destroy the natural beauty there.
pffff i wish i would be half as hopefull as you.
They are guaranteed to destroy the environment. They don't care, they only care about $$$$$.
small price to pay to save the planet
@@geoms6263ignorant thing to say.. how exactly does mining lithium "save the planet " ?
If history tells anything, they'll exploit it until the money runs out. Then walk away.
Thank you for bringing awareness. Hopefully they consider the situation of the indigenous people.
Yikes that’s a terrible predicament. ‘plugs in rechargeable phone lined with lithium to continue to watch video’
I think this is a great example of the resource curse.
hi michaelp, have you become a flat earther yet?
@@flat-earther man you guys are digging in the wrong hole looking for pancake batter.
True. It seems poor countries only elect leaders who are either communist or fascist. The communist mismanages the resources, and the fascist loots the resources. Ugh.
@@ThePilotGear why are you generalizing me saying you guys?
I don’t think necessarily to be a resource curse, but rather a human mismanagement problem of these resources not to mention the ferocity of human greediness is ever more present.
Economics can be done well or done badly. This isn't primarily a story about lithium or EV's. It's a story about how foreign players will inevitably act economically compared to locals. Partnerships with foreign companies to help with the technology needed can be just fine. Giving rights to the resource and development to foreign entities or control is an old story with inevitably bad outcomes, and there's no reason for players from Russia or China to care in the least. They don't need any relationship with these countries long-term.
Roger that! If it goes bad in China. Ouch! Globally? More Ouch perhaps.
The free market will always destroy due to simple human greed.
@@GeorgeMonet Not necessarily. There are businesses in Europe that have been operating quite freely for many centuries without destroying their resources, customers, or owners. It all depends on the incentives. Greed is often not the only incentive for a local company. The owners / shareholders often have hopes of their children and grandchildren having the same life and earning a living from the same business, and that won’t be possible if it’s just greedily self-destructive. If greed is your only motive in a free market, that reflects on you, not the fact that the market is free. That is also why a truly free market has boundaries (regulation and law), also, to deal with the inevitable bad actors.
They will use up the resource and leave a huge mess
You're right about Russia and China not caring. Partnerships? I would make them invest in millions building infrastructure, roads bridges power plants, before I would let them export one ounce of lithium. Of course they will simply buy off the politicians and take whatever they want. And yes unfortunately there are many in the west that would do the same.
The treated sewage likely has chlorine from killing bacteria, and other chemicals that would not be good for irrigation.
Thank you for uploading and sharing this very informative video.
Those communities are the reason why I hope we get alternative fuels for cars or equipment that currently work with internal combustion when its expensive or not viable to use batteries.
More than a few brands are working on synthetic carbon-neutral fuel, which works with current engines instead of fossil fuel. A few of them have shown real promise, Porsche's one being the most promising to date.
It would be need on impossible for any form of piston action engine to match the efficiency of an electric motor than only has one moving part.
You are thinking a fuel produced for ice cars isn’t going to have negative consequences during production for some reason?
Why is that?
@@showme360 you need a power plant to make that electricity, EV's pollute more when take account how electricity is made
This is the wrong mindset to have: rather than argue about which method to use to power cars, we should be focusing on dropping the number of cars needed as a whole. Improve urban planning to encourage walking or mass transit.
that amount of water could have been used for new farms for local people, reforestation projects, reversal of desertification
No, the water that evaporates comes from the salar, not from rivers. That water can’t be use for human consumption or for any other productive activity
and yet it wasnt used for any of those things.
@@Agustin_Rmining operations divert and pollute the rio san pedro and rio loa, the two crucial rivers that allow for these communities to exist. you are incorrect.
@@michaelsalama6631wasted words on fools who worship machines
The problem with all of these claims is that this video didn't actually measure any of these benefits or costs (as stated in the title) and so anyone can say anything here. What are the benefits of reforestation? If I had to guess, I'd say from an avoided climate damage perspective (carbon sequestration) they are waaaaay less than the benefits from batteries replacing fossil fuel use. Is reversing desertification important, if even possible considering climate change and how would we get there without the lower fossil fuel consumption that is the whole purpose of these batteries? How many people would that effect and how do those benefits stack up in aggregate? Are new farms even a good idea considering market factors, let alone in such an arid area? The concept of this video was great, the execution - not so much.
Great reporting!!!
it’s cool that some awesome mineral specimens are found at least
The human rights issues due to cobalt mining in Africa, especially for the Congolese, is atrocious. I wonder if people really knew what it takes to make their electric vehicle…would they still support the industry…probably - and that’s the real sad problem…because people really don’t matter to these big corporations…it’s the “environment” that really matters.
I have ab ev. It has zero cobalt. Stop pushing your pro fossil fuel misinformation
They wouldn’t. But the legacy media makes sure that they don’t run stories about it.
'The environment' is just what people have been brainwashed to care about, and they have also been brainwashed about how 'the environment' can be saved. At the end of it, very little of it is not just the way the people who benefit the most from it, are best able to do exactly that. Imagine if more money could be made from manufacturing EVs than vehicles with Internal Combustion enginess, then force the market into EVs by 'banning' IC vehicles...
I won’t be buying electric, simply can’t afford it. Second hand cars cost $10,000 for a new battery.
@@tsunamis82 Without the battery, they are not worth much.
I'm so glad this has come out. Fresh water though it's renewable. This amount of freshwater will go into the saltwater portion of the cycle
Collect Rain water. Don't worry about the local water rule... it is safe, sorta. ;)
Freshwater isn't that renewable. Especially if they are pumping out groundwater which can take thousands of years to replenish. We are getting less rain and snow every year, snow melt is converting to water vapor directly instead of turning to snow melt that adds to water tables for rivers and lakes,. There is not enough fresh water to go around in many locations on Earth. Look at the news, see all the places experiencing record high temperatures and droughts.
@@GeorgeMonet Fcuking is in England we've had a whole July of it.
7:35 I can see it's tough but my word isn't it beautiful view. He seems like great father too.
Imagine where we will be when table salt is expensive or rare.
You mean after we've sold all the trillions of tonnes of salt to the Zagon Galactic Empire?
I guess we're gonna be screwed after that happens.
It won't, salt is one of the most abundant materials on earth. About 3.5% of seawater is salt, and seas/oceans cover 71% of the earth's surface
This is happening at the Salton Sea here in California. They are building a factory here soon.
Thanks for this information.
This makes you think what we take for granted... Is destroying land and peoples need for water worth all this?
Very great full that this video is being shown. I feel very strongly against the electric vehicle and the lie being advertised to the ignorant that the electric car is environmentally correct.
There is currently no patented method of recycling Lithium batteries, no method commercially practiced. This should be concerning to people with a brain.
The poor people always suffer when these kinds of things happens 😢, all the big company and government see is the money it’s sad
As long as it's not "in my backyard" a blind eye is the only thing to be received from the countries that benefit.
The Atacama isn’t one of the driest places on Earth, it is the driest place on Earth. In some parts it has never rained and the only water available is stored in the massive underground ocean underneath…now we’re evaporating that back into the hydrosphere for the first time in decades, and this will have an effect on the climate.
The green energy future will leave behind dry desiccated landscapes and the graves of the people who lived there.
They are already deserts though. It's a salt flat, what are you going to grow there?
What do you think made many of these places dry in the first place? It’s climate change induced by fossil fuel usage
@@Mirakolisclimate change hasn't caused desertification... It's simply that they were already deserts. Climate change has only caused ~1.9F temperature increase. That is not bad, but it isn't bad enough to cause desertification (yet).
@@sethgrissman6833 all deserts are the result of climate change.
Amazing that ecologists are fine with this?
Who says they are? They aren’t!
my perception is that the water shortage was already a problem when lithium extraction began, (just maybe) caused by climate change. Big companies should be held accountable and give back to the communities what they need, but that's socialism and no wants that.
@@deborahferguson1163How about the environmental gestapo ?
Who cares. Is Greta OK with this? Maybe she needs a bath in that water.
Most of them are paid by billion-dollar corporations in many ways. They get paid to shut up. They get paid to go along with the company's false research or to come work for the companies selling their own souls to greed.
I always thought the worst started with 1 Mining Magnates 2 Judges 3 Lawyers
Gotta put human need ahead of innovation
exactly, so bring these people to somewhere nice. They live in dry and barren land. This is already a pretty poor life they live, so if you actually cared, you'd get them a place somewhere nice. But then again, its not really about the people but the soulless ev's eh?
You have to put the needs of eight billion humans ahead of Jose Morales. Climate change threatens everyone, including Jose. It also threatens most other species of life on the planet. Sorry about Jose's rough deal, but what happened to all his neighbors? They left to make a life somewhere else because the drought (climate change) made it too hard to live in the desert. Maybe Jose should do the same thing. Some places just aren't good for humans to live in.
Anything with "commitment" and "big mining company" summon a feeling of scepticism and comedy nowadays.
Sanction works way better.
Unfortunately wherever & whenever USA - China or Russia gets involved in mining the end result is always catastrophic for the local population ! 😢😢
No one seems to put that together because these countries do an amazing job at distracting its populations, covering up the lie with propaganda, and just the fact that, especially in America, there is a huge concentration of sheeple that will believe anything and everything.
That could be said for any country doing mining.
Usa does it best, nobody left alive to suffer 😂
😂😂😂😂😂 Дак не езди на авто, не летай самолетами, не ешь продкты так как в 99% случаях они перевозятся траками с дизелным двигателем🙄
Any country mining. No reason to pretend that the US, China or Russia are magically worse.
I mean it sounds like we just need to pressure them/hold them to switching to sea water. We also need to insure these countries actually benefit to the fullest off these plants.
the desalination plants in chile’s atacama use massive amounts of energy, nearly all of which is fossil fuel generated. also the desalination leeches chemicals into the sea, causing high levels of cancer and other disease and kills the marine ecosystems. every solution has a drawback, but instead of opting for the most sustainable and least destructive, mining companies and government (often one and the same) just choose the most profitable option in the short term.
Without the Andes blocking the rain, those lithium deposits might've just washed away into the sea ages ago. Yet, if it only rained there, they wouldn't be facing a fresh water crisis.. but the trade off is there wouldn't be any lithium to mined.
Thanks so much for sharing
My question...... what happens when these mines start drying up? The cost of batteries worldwide would rocket up as the supply dwindles
Costs will certainly go up much sooner, as the mines are reaching max capacity. No big deal. Sooner or later this EV fad will subside and good old diesel will rise again. The car owner will pay for everything.
in fact when supply dwindles the cost will drop because no one would invest on it and move to the next thing
@@jmi5969exactly. Biggest fad in history
What happens to ICE vehicles once oil begins drying up? At least it is possible to recycled older EV batteries. They can be 95% recycled, with the lithium and cobalt being 90% recovered and reused in new batteries. Is anyone recycling and reusing old burned gas/petrol or diesel?
@@Brian-om2hh drying up 😂 Don't believe the lies sheep. Car oil is recycled... So is car parts. You are obviously uneducated AF like most EV fans, batteries can't be recycled forever, they break down. Your arguments are totally flawed. You do realise electricity to charge EV's is created by burning coal 🙄
Looking at how poor in water reserves are these countries and still mining lithium. In Serbia a company was planning to mine lithium but my people protested and it didn't go thru even tho we have lots of water.
If the water is evaporated, can't they condense the vapors and have pure water as a byproduct?
It seems really wasteful just having the vapors escape in such a dry area.
UK bases Technology minerals/ Recyclus are addressing the recycling battery mountain problem . so much goes to waste and landfill when batteries are depleted.
Getting your cobalt as fast as we can Greta.
you're aware our main cobalt needs are in the fossil fuel industry, refining gasoline to reduce sulphur?
Meanwhile there are tons of lithium batteries that use no cobalt at all
like the US is not doing this 😂😂😂 climate change might be real but its politics to them they dont care
imagine being so brainwashed you believe climate change is driven by human activity
This was a concern for sometime , also reason to do solar and wind hydrogen and fusion then just battery alone ain’t enough, this reason to figure how to make the atom as alternative to mining anything, even to fix earths natural disasters and swell as much natural disasters in near future
Nice that you folks are catching on 10 years later!
I don't see Greta or Just Stop Oil protesters rallying against this, how come?
Гретта играет свою роль, как актер Зеленский играет роль президента😂😂😂
yeah I bet that American Lithium companies do it very differently in Nevada, isn't that right Business Insider/Axel Springer SE?
I bet they have much to learn from them, let's see it, I'd love to see a complete report of Lithium extraction, the American way, done by Business Insider and their boss, Axel Springer SE. Wouldn't that be interesting too, Dr. Mathias Döpfner?
Lithium mining in Nevada is hard rock mining not brine extraction.
There are brines in places like the shrinking Salton Sea.
I'm really curious what the point you're trying to make is. That work standards in wealthier countries are higher? That companies have gotten *really* good at screwing over Central/South American countries?
Like the Bauxite rush in Jamaica..
Big Oil has enough money to throw around
The amount of power it would take too run all electric vehicles is mind bending. People are being denied permits all over commercially for power stations as reports show some of these use more power than the whole town…
Cite one actual case. Your deluded or lying. Which is it. It costs 4 dollars to charge a car. Without profit.
@@Jhossackyou are one inept muppet.. you're the deluded one here champ if you think the current electrical grid can handle everyone owning an EV.. Most hot countries can't even handle a summer providing aircon usage in homes..
The amount of power it takes to run the oil industry is also mind bending. Huge amounts of electricity are required just to pump crude oil out of the ground, before it even reaches a refinery..... and once it does reach a refinery, around 6kw of electricity is used to produce each gallon of gas/petrol or diesel. Then 25% of *all* the diesel produced is used to transport the rest of it to where it is stored or sold. Madness....
@@Brian-om2hh And funny enough, if you switched to electric power right now entirely.. it would be worse for a LONG time, battery charge capacity, and efficiency is not there yet for many applications. We re getting closer though.
@@Brian-om2hh Madness indeed... but that applies to both of these options. One has already raped the planet and caused possibly irreversible harm and the other is currently in the process of doing the same, a battery is just an energy storage device and electricity generation is not clean enough yet. EV's will not save the planet and there manufacture is causing considerable harm. I have no preference or answers but would question major government green policies that are pushing this short term stuff due to economics.
Are some salt pools in the middle of the desert really a big deal?
"So Bolivia will become an energy superpower like Saudi Arabia?"
"Err no"
As is industries care about the environment or local people...never happens. They care about profit before everything.
The new Apple Mother nature advert 😂
Sodium ion batteries are on the horizon and slated to launch late this year. Assuming it does do what it promises to do then the need for Lithium should lower.
Jac yttrium 3 с таким аккумулятором🤫
They are so so far away from being a thing bud.. respectfully intended but I guarantee you that this is not something you will see in the next 10 years
@MrDmadness If I remember right the Chinese are having a difficult time making there's run at all. Seen several videos of their EVs catching fire more so than people say Teslas do
Which will require the same mining and create the same pollution
@@Leo-gt1bxI’m not sure mining salt needs to create any pollution. We already produce a lot of salt for our food systems. There are many established salt flats, it’s just a case of evaporating sea water
How can these lithium companies keep the people WHO LIVE IN THE COUNTRIES in the dark about their processes and agreements and sit by when they are dying of thirst?
This is nothing in comparison to the scale of environmental damage from oil and gas extractions.
Water can be drawn from desalination plants powered by renewables.
This is only part. Hunter Briben and the Chinese are in a partnership to use child labor to clear cut and strip mine the Congo for Cobalt. It's a disaster worse than Chernobyl.
It’s not nothing. For example There are plans in my state to build an open pit lithium mine in Gaston County. This mine would destroy mountain forest and farmland and probably pollute clean creeks
You have no idea what energy even is is all I'm hearing
I mean; It’s good to appreciate criminal negligence. It’s another to appreciate being a participant of it. Anybody with a device able to watch this video is a contributer as well. Same goes for, “Insider News”
The _"true cost of oil drilling"_ on local environments is orders of magnitude worse. The whole resource extraction industry has a long history of abusing the environment (and the local people). However, this video felt more like an *oil shill hit piece than news.* The real solution is to push for rules to ensure resource extraction is done responsibly everywhere. All mining companies should have to play by the same rules and invest heavily in technology and techniques to minimize their impact to the environment.
Agreed
And unlike oil extraction there is a workaround for lithium pollution and resource wasting. It's called sodium-ion batteries. There is no work around for fossil fuel pollution and eco destruction
Ah yes, the "but this other thing is also bad, maybe even worse, so we can just ignore that we are starting up a new, problematic thing" excuse.
Wouldn't it make more sense to solve the problems of the new industry, before it spreads them across the environment? You know, only start a new, clean version of it, that does not, yet again, expect the poor local community to deal with all the problems for little or none of the benefits?
@@gomezgomezian3236 That's *NOT* what I said. You fossil fuel proponents just can't seem to ever be truthful. You think your little sneaky debate techniques are so clever. Here's your gold star for being such a good debater: ⭐
Your whataboutism is glaringly obvious.
I just wonder why don't they use closed confined shed kind of structure to trap the vapours which then can again be used in the process. Definitely this will add to the cost but would be far most cost effective than desalination.
How will the sunlight reach then?
@@Navaneeth576 it will work in the same way as green house
Ooooh the irony! These tree huggers riding around in their Teslas couldn’t care less.
The government has just announced their intention to build a massive lithium battery factory, at Bridgewater in Somerset. Meanwhile, all we hear is terrible stories of negativity about EV vehicles, and what a catastrophy awaits us.
Saves them from building good public transport at least!
Well, this report is not bad. Although I would scare the lithium industry a little bit. I would have included the new findings in battery scientific research that proposed alternatives to lithium.
Sodium-ion batteries also swerve sharply from lithium-ion chemistries common today. These batteries have a design similar to that of lithium-ion batteries, including a liquid electrolyte, but instead of relying on lithium, they use sodium as the main chemical ingredient.
That means all that brine would have to be filtered, or get its water evaporated and still bring a little income to those South American countries. However, much less than lithium. But may not need sweet water in the process.
Where are the people who say EVs are clean? They aren't even close
Mostly a concern for oil companies.
Half of global lithium comes from Australia where wages are fair & environmental considerations are substantial.
Things aren't perfect here but likely a less troubling scenario than Bolivian lithium, or oil drilling for that matter.
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Was that why an Indian company was given the rights to mine coal in an Environmentally sensitive region? Australia's largest earner is education after mining. With the lack of any other industry or income, the Govt will not let an opportunity to export minerals slide.
Half don't.
Oil drilling, You're full os sh!t.
All Fokus on Lithium. I will juse Oil...its better for the environment 🙃
You can make a dramatic story with just about anything farmed at an industry level. Just as there is a massive amount of stories about oil and the harm it has done, of course led to the need for more lithium. There is no getting away from the need for the things that power our world. Could we care more and capitalize less, sure, but good luck making that happen.
Yes, but no. The problem isn't that mining lithium affects the environment, it's that EVs are advertised as "green" when it's actually not. Extracting the resources needed to make EVs is just as harmful to the environment as extracting oil. It's not environmentally friendly, but few people seem to take notice.
@@danielcreatd872 Agree, but that don't excuse doing damage because it's less then oil. Or any other industry that's primary purpose is to power our world. To make things worse we still need all those other industries including oil. All EVs have done is add more demand and create a new problem. If we got rid of oil I would be all for it as we chose the lesser of two evils, but that's not the case.
@@John-cp6uc Most life cycle analysis show that EVs are more environmentally friendly than internal combustion engines, even accounting for the harm done in manufacturing. The environmental damage done by lithium or cobalt mining is local and won’t affect the rest of the world, while the same cannot be said for carbon dioxide emissions.
@@John-cp6uc I never said they were completely harmless. I simply said they result in less carbon emissions overall. A single fossil fuel powered vehicle digging lithium can replace thousands of other fossil fuel vehicles with its output. And as I said before, the damage of mining is mostly local.
@@blerst7066 It isn’t completely harmless, but it is much less harmful. The damage done by lithium or cobalt mining is limited to the local area, unlike carbon dioxide emissions.
As long as we live, we will want more comfort in our life which in turn sacrifice the environment and planet without us realising it.
Great, now do one for Cobalt please
Please do the true cost of oil drilling next. Be sure to include all wars fought over oil. All oil spills. And the impact of oil drilling operations.
Don’t worry, it is only the beginning of lithium mining. I am sure the industry will surpass all aspects of oil and much more.
Wars fought over oil are fueled by artificial factors. The US has enough oil to be self sufficient while exporting oil. IF you believe climate change is caused by human inputs, consider this: currently the life contribution of an electric car is greater than a petroleum fueled car. This will likely change as new methods of recycling lithium from spent batteries is developed, but the carbon contribution of petroleum could instantly decrease with relaxed government restrictions. The US contributes about 15% of the world's carbon emmissions. Cut it in half and statistically it would be negligible. Don't get me wrong, I'm not a scientist and I'd like to point out, neither are you. I'm all for reducing carbon emmissions on the chance that global warming is real and the chance that humans are causing it, but our savior is not electric cars.
I said nothing about climate change, not sure why you had to write that entire essay. Electric vehicles will be pushed to the masses no matter what. Climate change has nothing to do with it. Other than being a “feel good” emotion.
@@rcampbell4967 I'm less worried about carbon, and more worried about the forever chemicals that corporations dump into our environments that infects our water.
In 2023 a study found that about 45% of US households tab water has some level of forever chemicals in it (Forbes wrote an article about it this summer), but I don't see the news talking about this every day like "climate change". Also the phrase "climate change' is kind of meaningless because the Earth's climate has changed before humans existed, and will continue to change if all humans died, remember the ice ages? Thats climate change too. In the 1970s the media thought Earth was going into an ice age, and I think we can all laugh at those predictions now.
I agree that the earth warming up a lot could be an big issue, but I think the dumping of harmful toxic chemicals into the environment will poison the earth before the earth becomes too hot due to global warming.
@@Igor-uj1sx I was replying to the original poster, not you.
If people still drove their old gas powered vehicles every day for the rest of their lives, they would put out less pollution than companies that manufacture lithium 🔋
Nevermind petrol, go diesel
What an dumb statement, completely missing the context Firstly, lithium isn't only used for car batteries. Secondly, what "people"? Only those who had a car 20 years ago? There will be many more EVs than gas powered vehicles at some point because more and more people can afford a car (on a global scale).
Would it be better, if all the people in China who started to be able to afford cars in the last decade would choose a gas powered car?
The actual problem is people are fat and lazy, they drive too much for unnecessary things, and many countries have incompetent governments that are lacking decades behind in public transport (USA).
Thank you for this journalism. Bringing this to our attention. There is climate change - but we are going to extremes at the cost of other resources. I would love to have known the toxic effects and occupational hazards of the brine - if any.
Very cool ❤
If companies are building plants planning for next 5 or 6 decades, they have already done their homework. What they need to do is build water pipelines to nearby habitable areas and provide that free of charge. In fact that must be in their government contracts.
Probably too late, but yes.
Well you're just dreaming if you think human beings are going to live that long.
@@boblatkey7160 Dream I must because the alternative is oblivion
We’re heading there buddy, and others have already made that decision for us a long time ago
it should be a problem if it is a short term (relatively). But, if the mine lasts that long, they could just make solar plants there to desalinate seawater/repurpose used water., they can use the fact that there's virtually no rain clouds all the time. when everything is done, those solar plants can be used by the locals to power their towns.
using oil powered machinery to mine material for electric 🤔
ironic
Using an established technology to make something new 🤔
Dumbest thing I’ve read today
Seems a prime location for solar, especially at those altitudes that almost never have any cloud cover.
And some day they'll use electric power to build the energy systems that draw from the quantum vacuum.
An even bigger deposit has been found in the US. Along the border of Oregon and Nevada!
Try Cornwall in the UK we have tons of it.
So in Chile we pump underground potable water into these evaporation pools to create brine, while in Saudi Arabia they don't know what to do with too much brine from desalination plants and pump brine back into the ocean?!
I also recently learned that where I live, the sewage treatment system treats and purifies a volume that represents about half of what our biggest irrigation dam uses. But all the treated water from the plant is just dumped into the ocean instead of being reused for irrigation.
Oh this humanity!!!
Well that brine doesn't have any lithium in it! 😂
there are reasons for what you mention
Because poisoning the land and people with water containing toxic chemicals is a great idea amiright?
Calling something a brine doesn't mean it is all the same. Brine in this instance means it has a mineral salt but that salt isn't necessarily NaCl nor is necessarily a lithium salt. And the brine pumped into the ocean by plants in Saudi Arabia is very highly concentrated saltwater where they have already removed a large volume of fresh water from that brine. Well large as in 10%ish by volume. The remaining brine is a useless poison due to the extremely high concentation of NaCl.
Greed will always come first before humanity and compassion for indigenous people. This cannot be sustained. 😮
Hope these Eco friendly groups watch this. And stop forcing electric cars.
❤amazing! ❤
The True cost is, inevitable collateral damage!
The country consumes about 4,900 gallons of potable water per second based on a 2017 water served in Chile. The fresh water consumption for processing accounts for 0.8% of total fresh water usage in the country annually. Compared to the US consumption of 3.8 million gallons per second.
It’s easy to make numbers sound scary without context.
If the mining industry does consume almost 50% of the country’s water supply, then measures should be investigated there. Not at the 0.8%
The problem is the amount of water they consume is affecting local communities and nothing is being done to help them.
@@DavidLucBelanger Because those communities are profitable to the companies, country and governments. China won't give a hoot if they use all of Bolivia's natural water, as long as it's not there initial problem, they can keep making a profit and the symbiotic nature between Bolivia's government profiting and the backlash from the citizens is heavily skewed towards ignoring the problem for the time being.
It isn't just the amount consumed but what the source of the water they consume is. A lithium mine consuming ground water in the desert is consuming a very scarce nonrenewable resource. The fact that other parts of the country have access to glacial runoff and use more water for agriculture doesn't mean anything.
Its consumption context is local. Not national.
@@danielmoyle5503 Since when are finite resources not a global problem? With your logic, air pollution is local too.
That's crazy, these companies have share some of their profit to local. They I guess someone on top is corrupt for sure.
water shortage in the country but the government rather let those big company having all those water used for their mining and do nothing about it for their people. should they not restrict the use of fresh water?
Now contrast it with the environmental and human impact of oil.
Amazing that humanity will not let go of their cars and modernity, even when it means mass extinction, even of themselves.
yes return to monkey
You are right. What’s crazier is that it’s a minority group of people who call the shots for the entire world. All they care about is wealth, power and control. It’s too late though. The ultimate destruction is in full swing.
Make do and mend option works better. People get hooked into these must buy a new car, phone or piece of tech on finance packages and replace them every three years rather than keep for longer periods and mend them. Usually its known as keeping up with the neighbours. I personally prefer if items are repaired and not thrown away.
Also manufacturers are to blame as they make the majority of their products disposable now with cheap buying costs, no product parts backup or they make them difficult to repair.
Some of us car and vehicle enthusiasts actually see the keep a older vehicle running a better option for the planet than buying new as you reduce the emissions of building and shipping new vehicles around the world.
@@carnage237or use trains like Europeans and Japanese
I wonder if the increase in water evaporation, would cause higher rain fall.
Not measurably, and definitely not where it is evaporating - e.g. where it is needed..
It doesn't. The dry desert can store a lot of the evaporation in the area and carry it quite far.
Not likely.. Google "latent heat" to better understand your planet :)
We have got to come up with a better way!
I just hope that I am alive to watch the demise of all humans from the planet. Including myself, it will be a great day indeed. We deserve it!
You sound like an edgy 15 year old.
Can't wait for the breakdown of the true cost of natural gas extraction, coal mining and oil fields
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