Ed Conway Profile picture
Nov 19 14 tweets 6 min read Read on X
🧵SALT🧵
It's been snowing in the UK and the road gritters are out in force, begging the question:
Have you ever wondered where that grit actually COMES from?
The answer is more magical, beautiful and fascinating than you probably realised.
1/14 Image
Because that dirty-looking salt being spread by trucks on our roads is actually the remains of an ancient ocean (actually two ancient oceans), buried deep beneath our feet.
Most of the stuff being spread in London comes from a single mine in Cheshire - at Winsford.
2/14 Image
Here, about 20 to 40m beneath the meadows of Cheshire, is an enormous slab of halite, rock salt, the remains of an ancient inland sea a couple of hundred million years ago.
This is where most of our salt comes from.
3/14 Image
The stuff we consume is pumped out in the form of brine (solution mining). But the stuff that goes on the road is mined PHYSICALLY - ground and dug away from the saltface. I visited the Winsford mine while researching Material World. It’s a pretty extraordinary place.
4/14 Image
The mine was opened in 1844, making it the UK's longest-running mine.
The tunnels are enormous - not just big enough to drive through but big enough to drive a double-decker bus through. You can taste the salt particles in the air.
The walls are pink & slightly translucent.
5/14 Image
Often when salt pools and dries, as in a salt lake, it forms these little ridges. Well, if you look closely at the ceiling in Winsford you see the imprints of those tiny pools that formed 200 million years ago when the briny waters collected across what is now Cheshire.
6/14 Image
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Anyway, the salt is ground and drilled by a suite of enormous mining rigs, controlled via what looked a bit like a playstation controller. Millions of tonnes of salt is sent away from the saltface up conveyor belts - every day of the year.
7/14 Image
Since the temperature down here is more or less constant and humidity is low (thanks to the salt), some of the old caverns here have been given over for storage. Priceless works of art and archives are stored here beneath the ground, not far from the machinery...
8/14 Image
As I said above, the Winsford mine is actually one of two in England producing rock salt. The other is at Boulby in N Yorkshire. This actually started life as a potash mine and these days mines something called polyhalite. I wrote about it here...
9/14
At Boulby they're burrowing through another ancient, buried sea - the Zechstein sea.
Actually it's even wilder than that. Since most of the tunnels stretch under the coast, they're mining an ancient sea hundreds of metres UNDER the seabed of a live sea (The North Sea).
10/14 Image
This place is a very different kettle of fish to Winsford. The tunnels are far more claustrophobic. The mine goes down more than a kilometre, with the upshot that it gets VERY hot - over 40 degrees, sometimes over 50.
This is one of the places where road grit comes from.
11/14 Image
The rock salt from Winsford and Boulby is ground into different sizes. There are 10mm grades and 6mm - the size difference determining how quickly they dissolve.
That in turn determines how long they take to deice the roads. Turns out there's a science and craft to grit!
12/14
And since govt is terrified we'll run out, salt is one of the few substances the UK keeps a stockpile of.
There's 250m tonnes stored in warehouses around the UK - the National emergency salt reserve.
Don't believe me? This is an actual thing! 👇
13/14gov.uk/government/pub…
Of course none of the above will have been news to you if you've already read Material World. If you haven't, well... bear in mind Christmas is approaching and the paperback is now available. Just saying...
14/14amazon.co.uk/Material-World…

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More from @EdConwaySky

Oct 31
🧵How worried should we (and @RachelReevesMP) be about the slightly nervy reaction from financial markets towards her first Budget?
Short answer: certainly a bit worried.
But perhaps not for the reasons you might expect...
Worth saying at the outset: these markets are volatile.
Trying to interpret movements in govt bonds is v tricky.
They're moved by all sorts of factors - fiscal, monetary, economic and structural - from all over the world.
So yesterday's Budget is only one of many factors here...
Even so, there has been a marked rise in UK bond yields following the Budget which is greater than what we're seeing in other markets.
This morning the UK 10 year bond yield hit the highest level in nearly a year. It's up 1.7% since yday - far more than US or German equivalents Image
Read 9 tweets
Oct 8
🚨Latest UK population numbers just landed.
Two headlines:
- The UK natural population (eg domestic births minus deaths) is now FALLING - at the fastest rate in modern history.
- Yet OVERALL population is rising at the fastest rate since 1948 🤯
How? Lemme explain...
🧵
Nearly every year since records began a century and a bit ago, more people in the UK were born than died.
In the year to 2023, that changed.
664k births. 681k deaths.
The net drop of 16k is the biggest on record (also in % terms).
It's a watershed moment for UK demographics. Image
Yet the overall UK population rose.
& not by a little:
...at the fastest rate in 76 years! A near 1% increase.
That's a massive change in the number of people in the country.
How? You probably already know the reason... Image
Read 5 tweets
Sep 24
🚨This is the story of how UK & EU goods are STILL going into Russia in vast quantities, despite sanctions.
Of how the economic war waged by the G7 is failing.
Of how I witnessed sanctions rules broken in plain sight.
But above all else it’s the story of a chart... 🧵
Here’s the chart in question. It shows you UK car exports to Russia.
And there’s a clear story here.
Look: when Russia invaded Ukraine, the UK (and for that matter most of the G7) imposed sanctions on Russia. So exports of cars to Russia stopped.
End of story, right? Image
Wrong, because now look at what happened to exports of UK cars to countries in the Caucasus and Central Asia.
At precisely the same moment as sanctions were imposed on Russia, exports of these cars to Russian neighbours suddenly ROSE. Image
Read 32 tweets
Aug 13
🧵Here’s the extraordinary story of a Frenchman who came up with an invention that changed the world, before events took a twist.
It’s a rollercoaster story that just might help us solve one of the biggest challenges facing humanity.
Sounds far-fetched, I know, but read on… Image
The man in question was Nicolas Leblanc.
Born in 1742, he trained as a doctor but was always short of cash. He became the physician to Louis Philippe II, Duke of Orléans - a minor French royal. Like many enlightened intellectuals, his hobby was scientific experimentation. Image
And when he heard about a scientific competition, launched by the French Academy of Sciences and backed by none other than King Louis XVI, he jumped at the chance. The prize of 2,400 livres (quite a lot - a few years of earnings) would go to whoever could turn salt into soda ash Image
Read 29 tweets
Aug 9
🧵Want to understand why weaning ourselves off fossil fuels like oil is such a tricky challenge?
Best place to start is with this ubiquitous toy👇
This is a thread about what I call the LEGO conundrum.
It begins when you ponder what a LEGO brick is actually made of... Image
Standard Lego bricks are made of something called Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene.
ABS is a tough thermoplastic you often find in the handles of scissors or the frames of hard carry-on baggage cases.
But Lego bricks are prob the most iconic application.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acrylonit…
Image
It's worth saying btw not all Lego pieces are made out of ABS.
Baseplates are moulded from high impact polystyrene. Gearwheels are polyamide.
The small, flexible green pieces that look like plant stalks or flags are polyethylene, and so on and so on.
lego.com/en-us/sustaina…
Read 22 tweets
Jul 31
🧵
It might look like something from space, but some folks think lumps of rock like this could help us solve one of the biggest problems facing the planet.
Others fear they could trigger ecological catastrophe.
Presenting the weird, unsettling story of polymetallic nodules Image
These potato-sized mineral lumps form over millions of yrs on the ocean floor as metals accrete around organic fragments.
Up until 150 years ago no-one knew polymetallic nodules even existed. Today they're a very big deal.
So. Here are the 2 main things you need to know abt them Image
1. These nodules contain ASTOUNDING concentrations of certain metals - esp nickel, manganese, cobalt and copper. The grades of metals are multiples better than anything you can find on land (esp now we've mined out most of the easy stuff). Image
Read 17 tweets

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