This 1 ton rock contains between 0.6 and 1 per cent of copper. One ton of ore generates a maximum 6 to 10 kilograms of copper. Depending on the size of battery, an electric bus can use between 224 and 369 kg of copper. How do we get the copper out of the rock? Mining 🧵
To start with we have to do a whole lot of mining. Mining requires massive amounts of equipment, fuel, oil and electricity. This shovel requires 4160 Volts to operate.
But before we get into that first we need core samples. Core samples determine whether or not we have a mineable property. How do we get core samples? We call in the diamond drillers.
With core samples the geologists can determine how "rich" the ore body is and where the best ore is located.
Ok we have a good ore body, lets start mining. Time to start drilling. Depending on the drill either diesel fuel or electricity is used. The hole diameters will range from 6 inches to 16 inches and be 45 feet deep.
Once we have drilled off the pattern, its time to fill the holes with explosives.
The blasting agent used will be an ANFO type of explosive – ammonium nitrate and fuel oil (diesel) mixture which may have a percentage of aluminum powder added. This will increase the efficacy of the ANFO by up to 30%. The blasting agent is a wet slurry or a semi dry prill.
Some shots will have 300 holes or more with a ton of explosive in each hole. After a shot you will see yellow or orange smoke at the blast site. This smoke is mainly oxides of nitrogen with a medley of other toxins created in the blast.
This dust, laden with all its toxins, can rise to more than a kilometer and will move down wind for many kilometers. The fly rock can easily hit an unsuspecting target a kilometer away. There is no bigger thrill than pushing that plunger. (Yes I've done it a few times)
Now it's time to call in the big boys. The shovels, loaders, support equipment and trucks.
But wait, we haven't even reached the ore body yet. First we have to take off the overburden to reach the ore body. Millions of tons of overburden. This is a typical overburden dump.
Ok we've reached the ore body, time to take the good stuff to the crusher. We need trucks for that, big trucks.
A 797 Cat haul truck weighs 623690 kg, holds 4500 litres of fuel and 6100 litres of oil/coolant. Each load approx. 400 tons.
Now we need crushers, ball mills, toxic chemicals, flotation tanks and a ton of electricity.
And in the end, tailings ponds. Toxic tailings ponds. We shouldn't really call them ponds, they are actually lakes. Tailings ponds can be the size of New York's central park.
So the next time you see that shiny new EV or that picturesque wind turbine they tell you is green, remember the amount of mining needed to make it. There is nothing green about #GreenEnergy
I hope this has given everyone a glimpse into my world, the mining world, and what it takes for just one element needed. Thanks for your time.
Copper demand, nearly doubling to 50 million metric tons by 2035. By 2050, demand will reach more than 53 million metric tons. To put this figure in perspective, S&P Global noted that that’s “more than all the copper consumed in the world between 1900 and 2021.” #GreenEnergy
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The $5 billion Tesla “Gigafactory” in
Nevada is currently the world’s biggest battery
manufacturing facility. Its total annual production
could store three minutes’ worth of annual U.S.
electricity demand. Now imagine the amount of mining we have to do in order to build this
But wait it's solar powered. Ok let's take a look at what is required to make PV panels. Green? Not in the least. Raw materials for 1 ton of metallurgical-grade silicon.
● Quartz 2.4 t
● Coal 550 kg
● Oil coke 200 kg
● Charcoal 600 kg
● Woodchip 300 kg
A mine I worked at, Kyrgyzstan. 12 people died the first month I was in, 11 from alcohol poisoning, 1 from a dozer falling thru an old stope. A supply truck crashed through a bridge, dumping a ton of toxic sodium cyanide into the local river, 2,500 people were poisoned.
When the dozer fell thru the stope we fished it out with a 120 O&K shovel. He was cut in half. The realities of mining.
The locals working at the mine would mix methyl hydrate and orange juice with a drop of engine oil. The methyl hydrate was to strong as it was are own supply. 11 died and one blinded. It was a dry camp, no alcohol allowed, so they made their own.
Insert lie - cause fear - take money due to lie and fear = climate change, green energy $$$
The oldest grift in the world yet people keep falling for it.
Seven Eminent Physicists; Freeman Dyson, Ivar Giaever (Nobel Prize), Robert Laughlin (Nobel Prize), Edward Teller, Frederick Seitz, Robert Jastrow and William Nierenberg, all skeptical of "man-made" global warming (AGW) alarm. populartechnology.net/2010/07/eminen…
Many think mining involves a man with a pick and shovel, although true in some cases, mining involves many complex chemicals and machinery. Milling is a big part of the process. This is a ball mill used to crush ore. Inside is steel shot/grinding balls, the size of a baseball.
But before the ball mill, the ore is run thru a primary crusher.
Now imagine the amount of smelting, manufacturing and manpower used in the production of just these two items. You cant talk about #GreenEnergy without taking into account all systems needed. But they don't want you to know this.
Let's talk about hydrogen, and how hydrogen is the most ridiculous energy alternative by far, yet the government is again giving away billions in tax dollars to the green grifters #GreenEnergy🧵
It is insanely far from being renewable because it has no energy at all, energy has to be forced into it like a battery, and you lose even more energy when converting it back to electricity. It has the highest negative energy return of any alternative.
First you have to split hydrogen from natural gas or use many times more energy than that to electrolyze it from water, compress or liquefy H, construct incredibly expensive and short-lived steel containers and pipelines because hydrogen degrades and embrittles them.
Elizabeth Warren will seek a new multilateral agreement to protect domestic subsidies for green products and preferential treatment for green energy production. Why? because she received $305,103.00 from environmental groups, that's why.
But she only received $117,734.00 from oil and gas development groups. So who ever pays the most wins.
If you think that's bad, Senator Rd Markey who promotes the "Green New Deal" received $418,591.00 from environmental groups, but only $159,891 from oil and gas.