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Bungling BBC Get It Wrong Again

May 22, 2014
tags:

By Paul Homewood

 

h/t Dave Ward 

 

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http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-27435624

 

According to the BBC:

 

In just over five years Britain will have run out of oil, coal and gas, researchers have warned.

A report by the Global Sustainability Institute said shortages would increase dependency on Norway, Qatar and Russia.

There should be a "Europe-wide drive" towards wind, tidal, solar and other sources of renewable power, the institute’s Prof Victor Anderson said.

Professor Anderson said: "Coal, oil and gas resources in Europe are running down and we need alternatives.

"The UK urgently needs to be part of a Europe-wide drive to expand renewable energy sources such as wave, wind, tidal, and solar power."

 

 Apparently it takes real journalists to point out the real facts.

From the Register, Tim Worstall reports:

 

Comment Among the more surprising things that the BBC revealed to us last week was that the UK was going to run out of coal within the next five years. Given that the island is pretty much built on a bed of coal, this is something of a puzzler.

The northern end of the huge water-filled pit, showing the coal seams in the rock at Broken Cross Muir opencast coal mine

Coal seams in the rock at Broken Cross Muir coal mine. Pic by Greg Morss, under Creative Commons licence

 

The article states:

In just over five years Britain will have run out of oil, coal and gas, researchers have warned.

A report by the Global Sustainability Institute said shortages would increase dependency on Norway, Qatar and Russia.

As your intrepid mineral resources correspondent (aka El Reg’s dodgy metals dealer) I thought I’d better have a look at the report that claimed this. As it happens, it appears to be an update of maps to this report from last year from the Institute And Faculty Of Actuaries that led to the claim.

Given my background, obviously I looked at the minerals rather than the fossil fuels part of it. And in this writer’s opinion I have to say that the people who wrote it betray a baffling ignorance of the subject under discussion.

They appear to work under the impression that mineral reserves are somehow the definition of the number of minerals we have left to us, when in fact reserves are the working stock of extant mines (more or less). They also seem confused about mineral resources, which are the piles of stuff where we know their location, how to get them out, that we can do so while making a profit at current prices and with current technology, though we may not have got around to proving that to the required legal standard. When we have proven it, they will move from being resources to reserves.

Given that phosphate rock and potassium as resources are good for 1,500* and around 7,000** years to therefore claim that, as this report does, that they were in very scarce supply in this last decade just gone is thus, well, it’s not very accurate is it?

Given that the two are also 0.2 per cent and 2.5 per cent of the entire crust of our planet the idea that we’ll ever run out of either with future technologies also seems a tad suspect.

And then I spotted this one. It’s a piece from New Scientist, a place I was knew as a seriously interesting magazine (Dedalus certainly used to make me larff).

In detail:

Without more recycling, antimony, which is used to make flame-retardant materials, will run out in 15 years, silver in 10 and indium in under five. In a more sophisticated analysis, Reller has included the effects of new technologies, and projects how many years we have left for some key metals. He estimates that zinc could be used up by 2037, both indium and hafnium – which is increasingly important in computer chips – could be gone by 2017, and terbium – used to make the green phosphors in fluorescent light bulbs – could run out before 2012.

This prediction was made in 2008. You recall how Apple stopped shipping iPads last year as the indium tin oxide to make the screens ran out? That we’ve been completely bereft of CFL lightbulbs for two years now as the terbium disappeared? No and no? Exactly.

For a metals guy, the one that stands out most is that reference to hafnium. It betrays a complete and total ignorance of how mining actually works. It’s true that there are no mineral reserves of hafnium, nor are there any mineral resources. So, our guys looked at what was in stockpiles, saw there were no reserves nor resources and concluded that it will run out.

However, "resources" and "reserves" are a legal and economic description, not one of actual availability. And given that Hf doesn’t form any interesting ores, we can’t go digging for it and make a profit by having done so. This is not the same as stating that there’s not plenty available though.

For when we go digging for zircon (the mineral sand) from which we extract zirconia (the oxide) and ultimately zirconium (the metal), we find that it contains two to four per cent Hf. We don’t care though, Zr and Hf are so chemically similar that we just don’t bother to separate them.

Except when we try to make nuclear-grade Zr: then we do care because Zr is transparent to neutrons and Hf opaque. So, to make those fuel rods for reactors, we extract the Hf from the Zr: and that’s where the global supply of some few hundred tonnes a year (perhaps 500) of Hf comes from.

So yes, there are no reserves and no resources because we cannot mine for it directly or profitably. But we can still produce it profitably. There’s some 18,000 tonnes a year of Hf in the 600,000 tonnes a year of Zr we do process and there’s some thousands of years of that Zr out there for us to process. And we only use 500 tonnes a year of Hf… so it’s not going to run out by 2017, is it?

This display of ignorance doesn’t stop here:

Take the metal gallium, which along with indium is used to make indium gallium arsenide.

This is the semiconducting material at the heart of a new generation of solar cells that promise to be up to twice as efficient as conventional designs. Reserves of both metals are disputed, but in a recent report René Kleijn, a chemist at Leiden University in the Netherlands, concludes that current reserves "would not allow a substantial contribution of these cells" to the future supply of solar electricity. He estimates gallium and indium will probably contribute to less than 1 per cent of all future solar cells – a limitation imposed purely by a lack of raw material.

Sigh. Gallium is another one of these byproduct metals. We can’t get it directly and profitably.

Fortunately we mine for aluminium by sticking bauxite into a Bayer Process plant, where we boil it in caustic soda. If you put the right doohicky on the side of this plant then you get the gallium out. It’s at about 100ppm, 100 grammes per tonne of bauxite processed. Some 8,000 tonnes a year passes through those plants, which is useful because only a few of those BP plants have the doohickeys and globally we only use around 400 tonnes of gallium a year. And yes, we do know that there’s around a 1,000-year supply of Ga in the bauxite that we already know that we’ll process for the aluminium content.

We simply don’t have any meaningful shortage of these metals that they’re worrying about. And our new report produced for the actuaries uses these older reports as the basis of its concerns.

And, as all good techie people know, GIGO. If the information you’re feeding into your process is bollocks then your output is going to be bollocks, and not of the he3 hi-niikoo’owu’u-no kind.

* Based on 300 billion tonnes of global resources remaining as estimated by the US Geological Survey at current global yearly consumption of 190 million tonnes a year (See PDF)

**Based on 250 billion tonnes of global resources remaining as estimated by the US Geological Survey, at current global yearly usage rate of 33 million tonnes a year (PDF)

All of which brings us to the much larger problem. We do have environmental problems, specifically climate change. We do have resource constraints, it’s just that we don’t have the ones that everyone wants to talk about.

And we don’t have sensible policy discussions about the ones we do have (knowledge most notably), because that wellwater of science is so horribly polluted by these displays of ignorance. There simply isn’t any metal or mineral that we’re going to run out of in anything approaching a human timescale.

I spent some time running through the reserve, resource and total availability estimates a few months back and got too bored to finally complete it. There simply wasn’t anything at all likely to run out within a few thousand years and who in hell wants to try to predict extraction technology or prices beyond that?

And it’s for this reason that all that planning that people are trying to do about the imminent exhaustion of mineral reserves is just so pointless. There’s not going to be a shortage of minerals, yet our entire politics on the subject is based upon the assumption that we will.

Thus we get told we must recycle more; limit human civilisation; the poor cannot be allowed to become rich for there’s no resources – hell, there are those who insist that we can’t even have, as above, green energy because there’s not enough metals to make the solar cells from. This is all total horse-puckey.

Even going back to the Club of Rome and Limits to Growth we see the same problem. They assumed that mineral resources were 10 times mineral reserves. It’s a central assumption too and it’s how they reached the idea that we’re about to run out of everything. But there is no relationship at all between the two.

Worse, the expense of confirming reserves means that we only tend to do it for resources that we’re going to want to use in the next 30-50 years. Meaning that if you do make their assumption, that resources are 10x reserves, and reserves are usually only a 30-year supply, then your assumption itself is what leads you to the conclusion that there’s only 300 years’ worth left.

All of which should really rather scare us all. For it really is the way the world is run today – on the basis of conclusions reached from faulty assumptions. And if you’re not worried that the world is ruled by the misinformed who want to plan your life on the basis of their misunderstandings, then what would it take to scare you?

 

 

Precisely!

11 Comments
  1. May 22, 2014 11:15 pm

    Reblogged this on the WeatherAction Blog.

  2. Streetcred permalink
    May 23, 2014 1:02 am

    “[ … ] if you do make their assumption, that resources are 10x reserves, and reserves are usually only a 30-year supply, then your assumption itself is what leads you to the conclusion that there’s only 300 years’ worth left.”

    Here lies the problem of their understanding so I’ll reduce it to common language … the relationship between “resources” and “reserves” is dynamic … when the reserves ‘run down’ resources are converted to reserves to replenish the reserves and hitherto ‘unknown’ resources are added at the other end of the equation through improved technology to bolster the resources. Every now and then they get lucky and resources are uncovered that were not expected … like gas for example.

  3. tom0mason permalink
    May 23, 2014 6:48 am

    Well its nice to know that the BBC journoliars are hot on bending facts again.
    Fits with their greenie ethos of propaganda –
    Keep it simple, say it often, never retract!

  4. Joe Public permalink
    May 23, 2014 10:44 am

    This article simply reported the findings of researchers from the Global Sustainibility Institute at Anglia Ruskin University.

    To me the issue, relating to climate stories, is the Beeb’s propensity to report ‘bad’ news and ignore ‘good’ news.

    Compare the Beeb’s choice of a pessimistic report, to the optimistic report from the Mail:-

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2593032/Coal-fuel-UK-centuries-Vast-deposits-totalling-23trillion-tonnes-North-Sea.html

    • Joe Public permalink
      May 23, 2014 12:51 pm

      As if by magic:-

      On today’s BBC TV News at 1:00pm, Harrabin’s report on fracking showed the discredited ‘Flaming Water Tap’ clip.

  5. May 23, 2014 11:44 am

    Joe Public is right ..much of the certainty the loonygreens at the Guardian and large parts of the BBC comes from that confirmation bias , which gives them a fantasy view of reality.
    ..Just like at hysterical old women looking at vioent crimes stories in the newspapers and therefore being in a panic afraid to leave their homes even in daylight

  6. John F. Hultquist permalink
    May 23, 2014 4:17 pm

    Whenever I read one of these “about to run out” stories I think of the urban horse problem of the late 1800s. Then it was a case of too many horses.
    http://enviroliteracy.org/article.php/578.html
    Those of the CAGW mindset of today would likely have mandated rubber band powered carts and trolleys.
    http://www.hybridcars.com/wind-hybrids-lessons-toy-cars-25372/

    The take-a-way is that given liberty and freedom, humans are great innovators. If we can get the government bureaucratic nannies out of the way (restrictions, subsidies, miss-allocation of economic and human resources) the solution to energy needs would soon be apparent.
    The current plan to make all countries more like North Korea seems like a bad movie.

  7. May 23, 2014 5:42 pm

    Reblogged this on Tallbloke's Talkshop and commented:
    Funny – could have sworn the BBC was reporting today that oceans of oil are waiting to be tapped under southern England. The BBC eh – LOL.

  8. cornwallwindwatch permalink
    May 24, 2014 12:00 pm

    Reblogged this on Cornwall Wind Watch.

  9. May 28, 2014 3:10 am

    Wow. That story is a solid indictment of the tragically misinformed, wildly spinning left. I was depressed by the end.

  10. Brian H permalink
    June 23, 2014 5:12 am

    There’s obviously no hope for mankind if the resources of brains are only 10X current reserves.

Comments are closed.