Seventy years ago, the United States was the world’s leading producer of fluorite, a brilliantly multicolored mineral essential to industries such as steel.
But the last American fluorite mine closed nearly 30 years ago, unable to compete with cheaper operations in places like Mongolia.
The decline of domestic mining means that Americans are outsourcing the environmental and social costs of our inexpensive consumer goods to lower-income nations.
More than 70 percent of the world’s cobalt, sometimes called the blood diamond of electric vehicle batteries, comes from the Democratic Republic of Congo, where child labor and sexual violence are rampant in mines.
About half of the world’s nickel, another key ingredient in electric vehicle batteries, comes from mines in Indonesia, some of which have destroyed almost 200,000 acres of rainforest amid allegations of operating illegally on Indigenous land.
Persons:
I’ve
Organizations:
Democratic, United
Locations:
United States, American, Mongolia, America, Democratic Republic of Congo, Indonesia, United Nations