B.F. Randall ⚛ ⛏ ⚡ Profile picture
Oct 23, 2022 65 tweets 23 min read Read on X
COPPER🧵redux. I live near one of the largest copper mines on earth (Kennecott Utah Copper - KUC). I helped manage a smaller copper mine for 8 years. Observation: Wind/Solar/Battery Proponents & ESG bean-counters are completely out of touch with copper mining & production. Image
CIVILIZATION’s very first metal was COPPER, eventually surpassed in importance by iron and steel. But with Edison and Tesla, world demand for copper became nearly infinite. Butte, MT held the world's highest-grade copper resources. And the whole world came to Butte TO MINE COPPER Image
Several lines of my family converged in Butte from as far away as Croatia, Cornwall, and North Carolina - to mine copper. My grandparents met there during WW2 (grandpa was at the USN OTS, School of Mines). My mother was born in Butte. I know a thing or two about it. Image
The so-called energy “transition” (energiewende) is a copper monster. The resulting demand for copper far exceeds anything the world has ever seen before—even during the electrification heyday (1870 onward). Image
For instance, a 3-MW wind turbine contains up to 4.7 TONS of copper Onshore wind farms use approximately 7,766 lbs. (3.883 TONS) of copper per MW. Offshore wind farms use over 21k pounds per MW (10.5 tons). PER MW nameplate. Image
Solar power systems use abt 5.5 tons of copper per MW (heat exchangers of solar plus wiring and cabling that transmits the electricity in PV cells). 262 GW of new solar installations between 2018 and 2027 in North America alone = 1.9 billion lbs. of copper. Image
But the new demand for copper is driven by far more than wind turbines. So let’s walk through a high-level, simplified explanation of what modern copper production requires.
COPPER mining starts with drilling. Drill rigs runs on DIESEL fuel. And they burn a lot. In copper mines, fleets of drills run in shifts, often 24/7. The drills require tires, lubricating oil, grease, dust control systems, and sophisticated electronics, maintenance, etc. Image
STRIP RATIO means the number of WASTE ROCK benches that need to be drilled, blasted, loaded, hauled, and dumped, compared to the number of ORE benches the stripping will open up. Strip ratios vary widely from mine to mine and phase to phase. Strip can be as high as 15.5:1. Image
The strip ratio at volcanic massive sulfide deposits like KUC are usually above 5:1. And that means lots of TUNGSTEN OXIDE drill bits. The lifecycle assessment for tungsten oxide production is not pretty. It's mostly made in China, home of hundreds of coal power plants. Image
Larger patterns usually work for waste but ore needs crushing, so drill patterns are tighter. Regardless, copper mining means drilling lots of holes through hard rock. It can take weeks or months to drill out a single BENCH (a defined block in the pit). rpmdrilling.co.za/blast-hole-dri… Image
Then comes the fun part: BLASTING. Ammonium Nitrate / Fuel Oil -ANFO- is the primary blasting agent. It's 94% ammonium nitrate with diesel fuel oil. AN is manufactured from methane and requires a great deal of fossil fuel energy and associated emissions. Image
It is not coincidental that the Nobel Prize carries that name. Alfred Nobel's weird trick (dynamite) altered the course of humanity in countless ways, from War, to the petro-chemical industry, to mining. thoughtco.com/history-of-dyn…
After blasting, all shot material (waste or ore) has to be loaded into haul trucks and moved out of the pit. Waste is dumped; ore is loaded into the crusher. It's impossible to quantify the net-net fossil fuel resources consumed up to this step. The scale is enormous. Image
EACH tire weighs 12,000 pounds and is made with nearly 100% PETRO-CHEMICAL feedstocks (hundreds of ingredients) and 100% FOSSIL ENERGY. Black=carbon black. Tires are NOT RECYCLABLE. And they don't last that long. KUC has its own tire landfill.
Steel to manufacture the equipment; tires; lubricating oil; grease; fuel; maintenance; batteries; wear steel; moving things around the world (importing trucks from Korea), mobilization, and demobilization - 100% consumptive just to drill, blast, pick up, and move rock. Image
Ore has to be crushed. The scale of this equipment is hard to describe. The fossil fuel and other inputs that went into this single crusher in one copper mine - and associated CO2 and other impacts - much less the power to run it - are enormous. Constant maintenance- replacement. Image
A childhood friend of mine has been a KUC equipment operator for decades. These trucks consume some 92 gallons of DIESEL fuel every HOUR, whether they're moving or not. KUC has a fleet running 24/7/365.
Next, milling & grinding. Sulfide ore is hard and must be milled down to a fine sand. Each ball/SAG mill is rated in thousands of horsepower (a SINGLE ball mill = 16k HP). Can't mill ore with weather-power. Mills operate 24/7/365. Image
We aren't even close to being done. After milling and grinding, the ore must be concentrated and tailings floated. At KUC, this requires pumping millions of gallons of water slurry many miles, requiring enormous quantities of dependable electrical energy (coal-gas). Image
Tailings are concentrator waste. The KUC tailings pond enormous. Its construction to date has required moving BILLIONS of tons of soil, rock, clay, and engineered cover (tens of millions of tons of processed, washed, screened, and imported sand and gravel). Image
It would be impossible to accurately quantify, today, the true fossil fuel requirements associated just with this one impoundment, its construction, maintenance, and reclamation. We won't know for years yet its final size / configuration. Reclamation is DECADES in the future.
Concentrates (24% Cu) are smelted using COAL. No other fuel will do. Sulfide ore is high in sulfur, making KUC an important sulfuric acid producer. Acid is sold for mining other (acid soluble) copper and uranium, making phosphate fertilizer, and other processes. Image
The ore at KUC is sulfide—not acid soluble. But the ore at the mine I helped manage is heap-leached very efficiently using KUC acid derived from sulfide ore. Industrial operations are efficient and symbiotic. Image
During smelting, the concentrates turn to “lava” and self-separate based on elemental specific gravity. Silica sand and other fluxing minerals form a “froth” at the top and are tapped/removed to form slag. Metal values from the smelter are then removed. Image
We still have a ways to go. Purification and separation of smelted metals and other valuable byproducts requires many more steps. Volumes have been written about KUC, one of the world’s most important mineral sources. This thread is an extreme oversimplification. Image
For copper, the process is Electrowinning. Metal values are dissolved in H2SO4 and then plated out in to form CATHODE plates. This step consumes vast quantities of electrical energy. TO BE SURE, because it is CHEAP, EW plants often utilize wind-solar power (e.g. load shedding). Image
The fact that mining companies use load shedding agreements to soak up excess, garbage power is not a compliment. It's because the value of wind-solar to the grid is so low that utilities have to pay to get rid of it. Image
The end result of the entire mining process is new cathode copper. I directly challenge analysts calculating lifecycle impacts of wind-solar-batteries to account for the fossil fuel and carbon impacts expended in producing new cathode copper. 100% consumptive. Image
Only the best, highest-quality (purity) copper cathode meets the specs for generators like those used in wind turbines. The wire must be rolled thin and long; any imperfections in the cathode result in broken wires.
Turning cathode into wire requires yet more FOSSIL ENERGY. Cathode is shipped from the mine to a rod mill (sometimes thousands of miles, including interim warehousing). At the rod mill, it's melted in an electric arc furnace (dispatchable power). Can't run an EAF on solar. Image
99.9% purity virgin cathode is prized by rod mill buyers. Wire gauge (thickness) governs resistance and other technical factors involving all generators. The thinner the wire, the more energy required and the higher the purity of the feed. Limited high-quality scrap can be used Image
And that's just the COPPER. Image
COPPER ORE GRADES: Copper sources have driven humanity since prehistoric times, especially Iberia and Cornwall. Advanced Roman metallurgy allowed them to flourish. One of my family lines came to Butte, MT from Cornwall - to mine copper. His Cornish ancestors dated to the Romans Image
Since Roman times, copper ore grades have been decreasing, astronomically so since Edison's and Tesla's inventions electrified the planet. This is a function of the natural occurrence of copper in earth's crust and the cost of extracting it. Commodity economics. BUTTE: Image
There are only 23 mines in the USA mining copper. The largest is Kennecott, which has large volumes of low-grade ore. Daniel C. Jackling was the first to figure out how to use large-scale equipment to get the low-grade to pay. Current ore grade reserves at KUC are 0.47%. Image
Why does grade matter? The essential CARBON energy required to extract one pound of copper cathode go up as grade decreases. Today's ore was yesterday's waste rock. BTW, Jackling's breakthrough? The COAL-powered steam shovel. Image
BHP, the world’s third largest copper producer, estimated that grade decline could remove about 2 million metric tons per year (mt/y) of refined copper supply by 2030, with resource depletion potentially removing an additional 1.5 million to 2.25 million mt/y by this date. Image
The only way to produce the same tons of Cu per year is to mine and process even that much more ore and strip that much more waste. Hard to believe you can't mine and process copper with windmills and solar panels. You need OCEANS of Petroleum, coal & such.
TO BE SURE, our ability to be able to economically recover copper from increasingly-declining grades of ore is a modern marvel, driven nearly 100% by ABUNDANT, CHEAP CARBON ENERGY. But declining grades are just a throughput issue. More mining; more hauling; more tailings etc
The so-called energy “transition” is expected to DOUBLE the world demand for COPPER in the next 10 years. As large as it is, KUC only supplies 1% of world copper demand. FANTASY: the world will create 100 MORE KUC-scale operations in a decade. Image
The World's large porphyry copper deposits are all known and most have been depleted or are nearing depletion, including KUC. Declining ore grades explain the vast impact footprints (Peru depicted). Image
But new demand will NOT result in a copper shortage, rather a shortage of AFFORDABLE copper. Copper will simply inflate till its cost matches copper’s next most economical substitution: ALUMINUM. windpowerengineering.com/aluminium-as-a… Image
Aluminum is a good conductor albeit with different properties and limitations (such as electric motor windings - Al is too brittle). Al is already used for wires. The primary impediment is simply cost. Compared to copper, production of Aluminum requires EVEN MORE COST AND CARBON Image
Al has 61 percent of the conductivity of copper, but has only 30 percent of the weight but both can be used in many applications. Substitution is happening and will continue to happen. BUT that does not mean Al has a lower carbon footprint.
ALL of the copper mined on earth prior to wind/solar energy was essential to civilization for uses unrelated to wind/solar. Copper requirements will continue and will even expand with technology development. INFLATING the cost of copper to match aluminum harms civilization.
IF Aluminium were better than copper, civilization would have already switched.
SO, doubling the demand for conductive metals will just result in INFLATION. Everything electric will just cost that much more. Inflation PRODUCTION Act much?
Yet, affordable copper abundance is simple. A single high-grade copper mine can change the world (such as Iberia and Cornwall for copper/tin and Petosi, Bolivia for silver). Thank Mother Nature. And the USA has two: Resolution Copper in AZ and Pebble in Alaska.
Resolution is one of the largest undeveloped copper projects in the world and has the potential to quite quickly become the largest copper producer in North America. The Resolution resource is high-grade, vast, and deep underground. NO OPEN PIT 🙌 Image
Remember, high grade ores mean the LOWEST CARBON FOOTPRINT. So, naturally, the same groups frantic to stop Climate Change via massive deployment of wind/solar/batteries SUPPORT the opening of such a rare, world-class, high-grade copper resource. Well, not so much.🤷 Image
It's hard to describe the internal amusement I experience every time a Wind/Solar/Battery advocate lectures me about the imminent depletion of uranium and thorium, while ignoring tiny details like COPPER and the perpetual CARBON ENERGY it requires. Windmills Forever!
Like this guy and his 22k followers. Image
@InsulateGB Fortunately for humanity, there is a far better solution that will not require any increase to normal worldwide mineral production rates nor result in mineral inflation. Its net-net fossil fuel inputs are de-minimis. That solution is nuclear power (fast reactor is + 27x) Image
@InsulateGB In the '70s world energy crisis, France overbuilt and had to scramble to find buyers and to electrify everything. That's real economic growth. Imagine that! Abundant, affordable energy FIRST; electrify everything SECOND. Today it's energy poverty first then electrify nothing. Image
@InsulateGB For more information, I highly endorse @MarkPMills podcast on the mineral requirements and other real-world implications of energy, wind/solar/batteries: podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the…
I also endorse @DecoupleMedia and the outstanding work of @Dr_Keefer, including several episodes with Mark P. Mills. podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6L…
@DecoupleMedia @Dr_Keefer The first COPPER thread devolved into a mostly unproductive debate about the recycleability of copper (it is recyclable but there's a serious contamination limitation + new CARBON), the image on the first post, aluminum, and such. Recycling:
@DecoupleMedia @Dr_Keefer FINALLY - if you haven't figured it out yet, "renewable energy" is anything but so.
Image
Highly endorse Professor David Ruzic on nuclear power. Please share this lecture:
and that's just the copper - take a look at the petroleum realities. Not smart.

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More from @Mining_Atoms

Sep 25, 2023
PSA: Recycling almost always consumes more fossil fuels than manufacturing new articles. The “circular economy” idea is a myth.
This applies to any article that would not not be "recycled" absent some government mandate, such as waste solar panels, waste wind turbine blades, LiOn batteries, many kinds of construction & demolition waste (cities have artificial "recycling" requirements that lead to absurdities), plastics, etc. Recycling of lead acid batteries, steel, aluminum, copper, and other minerals that have legitimate scrap value has been happening for decades and would be happening regardless of any government mandates. That's true recycling and it's an important source of resources.
By the way, waste plastic has a highly beneficial, universal, and economic use as an additive to asphalt for paving roads. It makes tar more durable due to the polymers. This makes sense and supplements road tar supplies (which is 100% petroleum). Road asphalt itself is recycled indefinitely.
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Read 7 tweets
Sep 16, 2023
PSA: Fission produces so much energy with so few resource inputs that it has no natural constituency, but rather many natural constituencies against it👇(100% honest ad) Image
In a fast reactor, one pound of uranium ($65) is enough fuel to supply 100% of the average North American's energy consumption--for 100 years. 🤔Any idea why Clinton-Gore killed fast reactor R&D? They said it was to save money. Image
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Read 5 tweets
Jul 1, 2023
PSA re entropy: "energy is most useable when it is concentrated and less useable when it is spread out" 9:30
Uranium is the most energy-dense material known to humans.
Wind & solar are spread out over the whole earth
entropy is the tendency of energy to spread out and become less useful over time
To be sure, the sun provides the earth with low-entropy energy relative to the energy that the earth radiates back into space. But that doesn't mean PV solar is low entropy. It's not.
Read 6 tweets
Mar 29, 2023
@marissa69904566 has an outstanding technical background. Wind-Solar-Battery Rube Goldberg machines will double world copper demand in a decade. This 🧵 provides compelling perspectives on “waste”—nuclear vs chemical.
This is not to denigrate the mining industry. It’s to suggest that mining and metal resource demand should be minimized. Nuclear power produces orders of magnitude more useful energy, consuming orders of magnitude fewer resources, than any engine ever devised by humans.
This 🧵refers to absurd denialism such as this:
Read 6 tweets
Mar 24, 2023
Another great 🧵— this time on tailings ponds. He left out heap leach pads. They can be well engineered but if not, failures are catastrophic.
The biggest issues with tailings and heap leach pad wastes are (i) volume; (ii) particle size; and (iii) elements. The volumes are massive. The fine particle size means huge surface area (leaching). Third, the wastes mobilize elements that don't degrade.
These elements will be a mobilized waste forever--even longer than radioactive waste is radioactive. What about the waste?
Read 6 tweets
Mar 16, 2023
Sane energy policy finally bubbles to the surface in the UK! Jeremy Hunt deserves massive political support. Low-cost, safe nuclear power is achievable. It’s the only energy policy that matters.
For all the comments on nuclear “waste,” now is a good chance to educate people. Used nuclear fuel still has 95% of its original thermal potential. It’s fuel for Gen IV reactors. 2022 tech. world-nuclear-news.org/Articles/Beloy…
Build thousands of MW of low-cost nuclear power and frack your own gas and pump your own oil or die. It’s that simple. Wind and Solar are absurd cancers on the grid. Stop building more or die. Bfrandall.Substack.com.
Read 5 tweets

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