Archive for March 7th, 2007

07
Mar

Mining the ocean floor being seriously considered

It seems that an Australian prospector wants to start mining the ocean floor. And he might just get his wish.

He claims that mining at the bottom of the ocean will eliminate many of the negatives associated with modern mining. [digg=http://www.digg.com/world_news/Mining_the_ocean_floor_being_seriously_considered]

Heydon acknowledges that digging up the deep seas could make him a billionaire. But he insists that it’s also the solution to all the ills that land-based mining has caused. No indigenous societies need be disturbed. Better still, land doesn’t have to be butchered. There are no open pits, no leveled mountaintops. To make the most out of poor-quality ore, mining companies use cyanide to increase their yield and run the risk of polluting streams and lakes. None of that, he says, will happen underwater.

 
Ocean mining may seem like the next logical step, and he goes on to say that much of the land based mines are becoming exhausted:

This new approach to mining comes as the industry reaches a critical juncture. Many of the major land deposits have been exhausted by the $225 billion-a-year industry. But demand for minerals has never been higher. China and India are rapidly developing a middle class that’s hungry to improve its quality of life. That means millions of new houses laced with miles of copper wiring and acres of corrugated iron roofing. It means TVs, cars, and cell phones flecked with gold and cobalt. “How do we tell the guy living in a thatched hut that he can’t have a new metal roof because it’s going to cause environmental problems?” Heydon asks. “When we were developing, we didn’t care about that, so why should they? It’s up to us to pioneer new options.”
  
Heydon talks a good game. And in the past year, he has almost single-handedly ignited the current rush to mine mineral deposits on the ocean floor. Shuttling between the UK, Australia, Canada, and the US, he’s delivered his spiel hundreds of times to investors like the ones gathered here in San Francisco, as well as to the world’s largest mining companies. Anglo American, the owner of the De Beers diamond dynasty and the world’s second-largest mining company, recently invested $25 million. An additional $75 million came from iron, steel, and zinc producers who are scrambling to hedge against the possibility that their terrestrial mines may become depleted. Nautilus went public on the mining-heavy Toronto Stock Exchange in May, raising $22 million more. This winter the company said it would issue additional shares, raising another $100 million. What was a concept-driven startup 10 months ago is now a company with a war chest of cash. And things are moving fast, at least for the world of heavy industry: Nautilus is on track to begin mining the seabed by 2009.

 
You can read the full story here.

This actually sounds like a pretty cool idea. On the other hand, I’ve heard some pretty amazing proposals in my life and I can’t help myself from thinking that this is nothing more than a pipe dream. It will be interesting to see how this plan plays out.

One potential issue that may arise if this idea goes forward is if mining companies set up operations in international waters. Will governments attempt to assume regulatory control over operations? What would happen if a large mining company bullied its way onto a smaller company’s claim? Who resolves disputes over claims or other issues?

If mining does proceed and no governments get involved, it could be an interesting experiment in libertarianism on a small scale. What do you think?

07
Mar

Mutant pig has two mouths, two noses and more!

This pig was born with one head, two mouths, two noses and three eyes. I wonder if everything is functional.

pig1_wideweb__470×3350.jpg

07
Mar

Why I fled George Bush’s war

[digg=http://www.digg.com/political_opinion/Why_I_fled_George_Bush_s_war_2]

Joshua Key, 28, was a poor, uneducated Oklahoma country boy who saw the U.S. army and its promised benefits — from free health care to career training — as the ticket to a better life. In 2002, not yet 24 but already married and the father of two , Key enlisted. He says his recruiting officer promised he’d never be deployed abroad, but a year later he was in Iraq. Only 24 hours after arriving, as Key recounts in The Deserter’s Tale (Anansi), he experienced his first doubts about what he and his fellow soldiers were doing there.

I was scared out of my wits that first day in Ramadi. Our own air force had just finished bombing these people, but as soon as we got out of our vehicles we began patrolling their streets, on foot. With nearly 100 lb. of weaponry, equipment and clothing on my back, I was about as mobile as a cow. It was just my platoon, 20 guys, walking single file through streets full of Iraqis. I could not stop thinking that anywhere, at any time, some half-starved sniper on a roof could have taken me out in no time flat. Iraqi kids surrounded me in swarms, hands out, asking for water and food. I kept hearing the last words [my wife] Brandi said to me before I flew out: “Don’t you let those terrorists near you, Josh. Even if they are kids. Get them before they get you.”

I was awakened at 3 a.m. that first night and told to get my ass up quickly because in one hour we were going to raid a house full of terrorists. Capt. Conde and some sergeants showed me and my squad mates a satellite photo of a house and a drawing of the layout of the inside. Our assignment was to blow off the door, burst into the house, raid it fast and raid it good — looking for contraband, caches of weapons, signs of terrorists or terrorist activity, then rounding up the men and getting out damn fast. The longer we stayed in any one location, the longer somebody would have to put us in the sights of a rocket-propelled grenade or lob mortars at us.

Read the rest here.




 

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