You have commented 339 times on Rantburg.

Your Name
Your e-mail (optional)
Website (optional)
My Original Nic        Pic-a-Nic        Sorry. Comments have been closed on this article.
Bold Italic Underline Strike Bullet Blockquote Small Big Link Squish Foto Photo
China-Japan-Koreas
China Facing 'Peak Minerals'
2005-08-21
China will continue to suffer from short supply of mineral resources and the situation could be even worse in the coming two decades, said a leading expert in policy-making.
Liu Jiansheng, deputy director of the Policy Research Office under the State Council, made the comments at the third China international symposium on nonferrous metals mining held from Tuesday to Thursday in Xining, capital of northwest China's Qinghai Province.
Liu said that China's consumption of minerals would peak in the first 20 years of the century, as the nation planned to quadruple the 2000 level of gross domestic product, or GDP, to 35 trillion yuan (4.32 trillion US dollars) by 2020.
To achieve the goal, the nation should ensure an average GDP growth at some 7.2 percent. It is predicted that minerals consumption will outperform the GDP in terms of growth rate during the 20-year-period, Liu said.
Official statistics show that 92 percent of the primary energy, 80 percent of raw materials for industrial production and more than 70 percent of raw materials for agricultural production came from mineral resources.
According to Liu, China's per-capita mineral resources is equivalent to 58 percent of the world average, ranking the 53rd around the globe. And its per-capita deposit of iron, aluminum and copper was one sixth, one ninth and one sixth, respectively, of the world average.
It is predicted that in 2020, shortage of copper will reach 3.57 million tons, while that of aluminum hit 10.55 million tons in China.
Posted by:Anonymoose

#4  This is a particularly ignorant piece. Aluminum is the most abundant metal on the surface of the earth and I believe Iron is the second most abundant. I can state categorically there will not be a 'peak' in production of any of these metals cause by declining availability of ore, although costs may increase as lower grade ores are used, but even that is far in the future on a global basis.
Posted by: phil_b   2005-08-21 22:52  

#3  Sounds like how the USSR bankrupted itself - no free markets and limited international trade > Commie Socialist Big Govt used up many if its domestic natural endowments. Proved their supp for Enviro agendas by wiping out various Seas but being unable to afford the cleanup or any cleanup in favor of nuclear parity with the USA-NATO. THe "SHARP SWORD" of force and intimidation always came first with the Ultra-Left, NOT AND NEVER UNIVERSAL DEMOCRACY OR LIBERTARIANISM. Might as well been BIG UNIONS here in the USA!?
Posted by: JosephMendiola   2005-08-21 22:17  

#2  Anyone know a reliable supplier for recycled LDPE and HDPE plastic? I'm buying...
Posted by: gromky   2005-08-21 21:54  

#1  Great, not only are they buying all the scrap metals in Asia and the world, all the concrete and steel in America, now we will have to deal with a shortage of Copper and Aluminum.
Posted by: 49 pan   2005-08-21 21:32  

00:00