Mining for the Next Million Years
by
George Reisman
by George Reisman
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For many years,
Ive been pointing out that the entire mass of the earth, from
the upper limits of its atmosphere 4,000 miles straight down to
its core, consists of nothing but solidly packed chemical elements.
There is not one cubic centimeter anywhere in the earths mass
that is not some chemical element or other, or some combination
of chemical elements. This, Ive said, is natures contribution
to the supply of natural resources, along with all of the enormous
quantities of energy that go with it, from the energy contained
in fossil fuels, uranium, wind, water, and the earths core
to the energy contained in thunderstorms and static electricity.
How much of
this immense quantity of matter and energy can be transformed into
the narrower category of natural resources that are economically
useable by and accessible to man depends on the state of science,
technology, and supply of capital equipment. In other words, it
depends on the extent of mans knowledge of nature and the
degree of his physical power over it. As man enlarges this knowledge
and power, he increases the fraction of nature that constitutes
economically useable, accessible natural resources. In the process,
he transforms what had up to then been mere nature-given things
into economic goods and wealth.
Ive also
always pointed out that up to now our power over nature our
ability to actually get at its contents and direct them to the satisfaction
of our needs has been measured in depths of feet rather than
miles and has essentially been confined just to the thirty percent
or so of the earths surface that is land. The clear implication
is that we are still at the very beginning of our ability extract
economically useable natural resources from nature.
Ive now
gathered some empirical data that indicates just how modest mans
mining activities actually are compared to the size of the earth.
For example, total global production of petroleum is approximately
30 billion barrels
per year. Each barrel of petroleum measures approximately .16
of a cubic meter. This means that in terms of cubic meters,
the physical volume of all the petroleum extracted in the world
in a year is .16 times 30 billion, which is 4.8 billion cubic meters.
Since a thousand meters equals 1 kilometer, a billion cubic meters
translates into a mere 1 cubic kilometer. So the physical volume
of total annual global petroleum production is presently 4.8 cubic
kilometers. And because 1 cubic mile equals approximately 4.17 cubic
kilometers, this means that all of the worlds petroleum production
in a year represents about 1.15 cubic miles.
All by itself,
this is enough to suggest that total global mining operations are
extremely small relative to the size of the earth, which is 1.1
trillion cubic kilometers, or approximately 260
billion cubic miles. This conclusion is confirmed when one considers
the global annual production of other important minerals, such as
iron ore, coal, aluminum, and natural gas.
Global iron
ore production was approximately 1.16
billion metric tons in 2003, the most recent year for which
data are readily available. The density of iron ore varies between
approximately 4
metric tons per cubic meter and 5 metric tons per cubic meter,
depending on the type of ore. The smaller the number of metric tons
per cubic meter, the larger the number of cubic meters required
for any given tonnage. Using the lower figure of 4 metric tons per
cubic meter, the total cubic volume of iron ore production in 2003
would be 291 million cubic meters, which is .291 cubic kilometers
or .07 cubic miles. Because much of the iron ore extracted had a
higher density, the actual physical volume of iron ore extracted
was considerably less.
Global coal
production in 2004 was 2.73
billion metric tons. Since the density of coal is roughly 1.3
metric tons per cubic meter, the physical volume of the coal
extracted was about 2.1 cubic kilometers, or about .5 of a cubic
mile.
Global aluminum
production in 2001 was 32
million metric tons. The production of 1 ton of aluminum requires
the mining of 4 to 6 tons of bauxite. Thus 32 million tons of aluminum
production implies the mining of as much as 192 million tons of
bauxite. Inasmuch as the density of bauxite is 1.28
metric tons per cubic meter, the cubic volume of the total amount
of bauxite mined in 2001 was 150 million cubic meters. This in turn
equals .15 cubic kilometers, or less than .04 of a cubic mile.
Global dry
natural gas production in 2004 was approximately 98.62
trillion cubic feet, which equals 2,774 cubic kilometers. To
put this figure in perspective, it should be realized that when
liquefied, the volume of natural gas is reduced
by a factor of 600. Thus the equivalent of this much gas in
liquid form is 4.62 cubic kilometers, or little over 1.1 cubic miles.
This, of course, is somewhat less than the cubic volume of petroleum
production.
If we add up
these numbers, they total 11.43 cubic kilometers or 2.86 cubic miles.
To allow both for the mining of everything else and for any extractions
we may have overlooked in connection with the items weve considered,
lets just assume the nice round number of 100 cubic kilometers
or roughly 24 cubic miles as representing all current mining operations
combined on an annual basis for the world as a whole.
In a tolerably
free, rational society, motivated human intelligence is easily capable
not only of continuing mans ability to extract this volume
of useful materials from the earth but also substantially to increase
it. If the present annual volume of such extractions were merely
to continue, it could do so at least for the next 100 million years.
By that time, a total of 10 billion cubic kilometers or roughly
2.4 billion cubic miles of earth would have been extracted, which
would represent a little less than 1 percent of the earths
total physical volume. If economic progress in coming centuries
serves to increase the annual rate of extractions by a factor of
100, then mining operations could continue on that vastly larger
scale for a million years, before 1 percent of the earths
volume had been extracted. The exhaustion of useable, accessible
mineral deposits is simply not a problem for an economy as free
as that of the United States was until a few generations ago.
Our growing
problems in connection with the supply of natural resources are
not caused by nature but by us. We have allowed ourselves to abandon
our reason and give up our freedom. We have allowed ourselves to
be led by people who would have us freeze and be immobilized rather
than spill some oil on snow hardly any of us will ever see or disturb
the habitat of wild animals that mean nothing to us. If we allow
this to continue, then where we are headed is to a world describable
by these terrible words of despair:
You must
know that the world has grown old, and does not remain in its
former vigour. It bears witness to its own decline. The rainfall
and the suns warmth are both diminishing; the metals are
nearly exhausted; the husbandman is failing in the fields, the
sailor on the seas, the soldier in the camp, honesty in the market,
justice in the courts, concord in friendships, skill in the arts,
discipline in morals. This is the sentence passed upon the world,
that everything which has a beginning should perish, that things
which have reached maturity should grow old, the strong weak,
the great small, and that after weakness and shrinkage should
come dissolution.1
As
I wrote in Capitalism,
that passage is not a quotation from some contemporary ecologist
or conservationist. It was written in the third century
long before the first chunk of coal, drop of oil, ounce of
aluminum, or any significant quantity of any mineral whatever had
been taken from the earth. Then as now, the problem was not physical,
but philosophical and political. Then as now, men were turning away
from reason and toward mysticism. Then as now, they were growing
less free and falling ever more under the rule of physical force.
That is why they believed, and that is why people in our culture
are beginning to believe, that man is helpless before physical nature.
There is no helplessness in fact. To men who use reason and are
free to act, nature gives more and more. To those who turn away
from reason or are not free, it gives less and less. Nothing else
is involved.
- The passage
quoted above appears In W. T. Jones, The
Medieval Mind, vol. 2 of A History of Western Philosophy,
2d ed. (New York: Harcourt, Brace, and World, 1969), p. 6
August
17, 2006
George
Reisman [send him mail]
is Pepperdine University Professor Emeritus of Economics, and is
the author of Capitalism:
A Treatise on Economics. Visit
his website.
Copyright
© 2006 George Reisman
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