Nation
World
Politics
Sports
Business
Entertainment
Life
Tech
Science
Opinion
Crime
Health
Oddities

Clean energy's dirty secret—human rights abuses in cobalt mining

Por: Newsweek World January 25, 2023

thumbnail

Electric vehicles (EVs) are a major cornerstone of clean energy. The modern economy is dependent on smartphones. Every smartphone, EV and other rechargeable battery requires the scarce resource of cobalt, and about half of the world's cobalt reserves can be found in one 250-mile region of the Congo known as the Copper Belt. Yet, not enough attention is paid to the conditions of the workers who mine that cobalt. Siddharth Kara investigated... + full article



Similar News

Shocking truths behind smartphone and EV batteries: children mining cobalt

Newsweek USA World January 25, 2023

thumbnailThe Copper Belt in the Congo (DRC)—a 250-mile crescent from Kolwezi to northern Zambia—is the source of 10 percent of the world's copper as well as about half of the world's cobalt reserves. Cobalt—deemed critical by the European Union and strategic by the United... + más

Clean energy's dirty secret—human rights abuses in cobalt mining | Newsweek

Australian company opens cobalt mine in eastern Idaho | Associated Press


The Case Against Deep-Sea Mining

Time USA Life October 26, 2022

thumbnailSeldom do we have an opportunity to stop an environmental crisis before it begins. This is one of those opportunities. The , creating a new environmental disaster with irreversible consequences for our ocean and climate. We urgently need a deep-sea mining moratorium to... + más

Deep-sea mining: Is it worth the cost? | Newsweek

The first crop of space mining companies didn't work out, but a new generation is trying again | CNBC


Australian company opens cobalt mine in eastern Idaho

Associated Press USA Tech October 10, 2022

thumbnailSALMON, Idaho (AP) — Officials with an Australian company’s newly opened cobalt mine in east-central Idaho say it could soon produce enough of the key ingredient in lithium batteries to build 400,000 electric vehicles annually.Officials with Jervois Global Limited held an... + más

Idaho and Taiwan sign two-year wheat trade agreement | Associated Press

Empty promises won’t end green slavery | The Boston Globe


The first crop of space mining companies didn't work out, but a new generation is trying again

CNBC USA Tech October 09, 2022

thumbnailJust a couple of years ago, it seemed that space mining was inevitable. , tech visionaries and even renowned astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson that space mining was going to be big business.Space mining companies like and Deep Space Industries, backed by the likes of 's... + más

Deep-sea mining: Is it worth the cost? | Newsweek

Crypto Billionaire Jihan Wu Aims To Raise $200 Million To Purchase Assets From Struggling Bitcoin Miners | Forbes


A Cheaper Chemistry Is Storming The Battery Market

Forbes USA Business October 04, 2022

thumbnailA miner inspects the inside of a cobalt mine at the Chilean Cobalt Corp. exploration site in La ... [+] Cobaltera, Atacama Region, Chile. Known for its vast copper deposits, Chile is joining the search for cobalt amid soaring demand for a metal that's mostly mined in the... + más

Click! 2022 Nobel goes to chemistry made simple and reliable | Ars Technica

iPhone users continue to complain of battery life issues after installing iOS 16 | 9to5Mac


Empty promises won’t end green slavery

The Boston Globe USA Opinion October 03, 2022

thumbnailElectric vehicles are an Edisonian testament to modern research and ingenuity. Unfortunately, however, the process of acquiring the requisite minerals for most batteries and energy storage is decidedly less commendable. Forced child labor and Dickensian worker conditions in .... + más

Even now, slavery is a worldwide scourge | The Boston Globe

Historians trash DeSantis' understanding of U.S. history—Beyond ignorance | Newsweek


Deep-sea mining: Is it worth the cost?

Newsweek USA Tech September 24, 2022

thumbnailDeep-sea mining has been approved for testing in the Pacific Ocean by the International Seabed Authority for the first time since the 1970s. The move has drawn widespread condemnation from environmental groups, with one Greenpeace campaigner saying the activity risks destroying... + más

The end of Ethereum mining could be a bonanza for GPU shoppers | Ars Technica

Deep sea mining, solution to tech world's mineral demand or potential ecological disaster? | ABC News



About iurex | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer |