As a miner for 40 years I have worked in various mines around the world. Gold, platinum, copper, coal, lead, zinc, oil and salt. I'm going to tell you something, and here it is. We will destroy the earth in the name of "Green Energy" Follow along and I will explain. 🧵
MiningWatch Canada is estimating that “[Three] billion tons of mined metals and minerals will be needed to power the energy transition” – a “massive” increase especially for six critical minerals: lithium, graphite, copper, cobalt, nickel and rare earth minerals
Over the next 30 years 7.5 billion of us, we will consume more minerals than the last 70,000 years or the past 500 generations, which is more than all of the 108 billion humans who have ever walked the Earth.
Mining requires the extraction of solid ores, often after removing vast amounts of overlying rock. Then the ore must be processed, creating an enormous quantity of waste – about 100 billion tonnes a year, more than any other human-made waste stream.
Purifying a single tonne of rare earths requires using at least 200 cubic meters of water, which then becomes polluted with acids and heavy metals. On top of that, imagine the destruction and energy required to obtain these essential metals:
18,740 pounds of purified rock to produce 2.2 pounds of vanadium
35,275 pounds of ore for 2.2 pounds of cerium
110,230 pounds of rock for 2.2 pounds of gallium
2,645,550 pounds of ore to get 2.2 pounds of lutecium
Also staggering amounts of ore are needed for other metals.
By 2035, demand is expected to double for germanium; quadruple for tantalum; and quintuple for palladium. The scandium market could increase nine-fold, and the cobalt market by a factor of 24. (Marscheider-Wiedemann 2016 ‘raw materials for emerging technologies’.
The potential demand for rare metals is exponential. We are already consuming over two billion tonnes of metals every year — the equivalent of more than 500 Eiffel Towers a day.
There is nothing refined about mining. It involves crushing rock, and then using a concoction of chemical reagents such as sulphuric and nitric acid, a long and highly repetitive process using many different procedures to obtain a rare-earth concentrate close to 100% purity.
As rare metals have become ubiquitous in green and digital technologies, the exceedingly toxic sludge they produce has been contaminating water, soil, the atmosphere, and the flames of blast furnaces.
Do you think solar panels are "Green" Think again. There is nothing green about solar panels. Did you know we clear cut forests, not for panel placement but for the wood needed to produce the panels. Don't believe me, have a read. hiddenhistorycenter.org/wp-content/upl…
I have seen the destruction of mountains, lakes and pristine waterways all in the name of #GreenEnergy. A recent report by the Blacksmith Institute identifies the mining industry as the second-most-polluting industry in the world. Soon to be Number # 1 Why? Green energy.
Green’ technologies require the use of rare minerals whose mining is anything but clean. Heavy metal discharges, acid rain, and contaminated water sources — it borders on being an environmental disaster. Put simply, clean energy is a dirty affair.
Wind turbines guzzle more raw materials than previous technologies: ‘For an equivalent installed capacity, solar and wind facilities require up to 15 times more concrete, 90 times more aluminum, and 50 times more iron, copper, and glass than fossil fuels or nuclear energy.
Think of China. One-fifth of China’s arable land is polluted from mining and industry. Mining the materials needed for renewable energy potentially affects 50 million square kilometers, 37% of Earth’s land (minus Antarctica). Now imagine that number 10 fold.
If you’ve gotten this far still believing that renewables are clean and green, well, I have a bridge to sell you. We thought we could free ourselves from the shortages, tensions, and crises created by our appetite for oil and coal.
Instead, we are replacing these with an era of new and unprecedented shortages, tensions, and crises.
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Some have asked "John why are you so interested in the Boston bridge?" Here's why. I made my living working on the largest land based equipment in the world, avid boater my entire life and almost died when my boat lost power in the St Clair river/tanker bearing down on me. 🧵
When I'm told by certain individuals to "Stay in my lane" mining, to me that's an insult. Believe it or not I have many diverse interests that I have studied and experienced at great lengths. I am not a one dimensional person.
I have farmed, built houses and worked on/repaired just about everything on Gods green earth. Climbed mountains, studied psychology and politics.
What is this? It's a schematic of an emergency steering system, as the name suggests, is a system that is used during the failure of the ship’s main steering system. Follow along and I will show you where I'm going with this. 🧵
Mining haul trucks have a steering safety system where If power is lost you must have a means of steering. This is done with a stored energy system by means of an accumulator.
An accumulator is a device used to store hydraulic energy in the form of a compressed fluid. The accumulator helps in maintaining a constant pressure in the hydraulic system by storing excess fluid and releasing it when required.
Documents filed by Xcel Energy for it’s Nobles Wind facility, 134 turbines. The wind turbines lasted 12 years. Cost to decommission $85,533,609. Cost to refurbish $204,000,000. But wait, let me show you how this scam works. #GreenEnergy thread 🧵
Repowering wind projects allows them to requalify for the wind Production Tax Credit (PTC), a lucrative federal subsidy that expires after the first 10 years of a project’s life.
It should come as no surprise, then, that data from the U.S. Department of Energy shows that the wind facilities repowered in 2021 ranged in age from 9 to 16 years old with the median age being 10 years.
Are batteries the future? A lot of people seem to think so, but are they? Let's put this argument to rest once and for all. What would it take to power the US for 24 hours (11.12 TWh)? In this thread I will discuss sodium, Li-ion and lead acid batteries. #GreenEnergy 🧵
If lithium were used for both EV and energy storage, reserves would not last long. But there’s a lot of sodium. A sodium battery is better than lithium as well because it is safer and keeps most of the charge when temperatures fall far below freezing.
But it is hard to get the sodium these batteries require. Their cathodes use soda ash (Na₂CO₃). Over 90% comes from deep under Wyoming, USA, in a vast deposit formed 50 million years ago.
Good Sunday Morning. Let me tell you a story about Canada's "free" health care system. This is my friend Mike with his band the Black Orchids. His son became very ill. They took him to different doctors trying to find out what was wrong. The doctors then referred him to .. 🧵
specialist for further testing. The problem was his son was getting sicker and it was going to take months for further testing because of the backlog of cases. Mike and his wife said enough is enough and crossed the border into Detroit. They found out in a week his son had cancer
But this wasn't cheap and costs were not reimbursed even though Canadians pay for their "free" health care from cradle to grave. No, doctors and nurses don't work for free in Canada. Someone pays. The Canadian tax payers.
If large power transformers are destroyed by a geomagnetic disturbance (GMD) electromagnetic pulse (EMP), cyber-attack, sabotage, severe weather, floods, or simply old age, parts or all of the electric grid could be down in a region for 6 months to 5 years.
This is because the USA imports 85% of them (and all of the largest ones), there is competition with other nations for limited production and raw materials such as special grade electrical steel, a high cost ranging from $5 to $20 million dollars.
They are custom built, with long lead times to design, bid, manufacture, and deliver, with components that depend on long foreign production and supply chains.