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The blog of the Wilson Center's Environmental Change and Security Program
  • Reading Radar

    Southern Africa, China, and “Sustainable Access”

    The Mineral Security of the United States

    May 16, 2011 By Christina Daggett
    In a report titled “Elements of Security: Mitigating the Risks of U.S. Dependence on Critical Minerals,” author Christine Parthemore from the Center for a New American Security writes, “Growing global demand coupled with the mineral requirements necessary for both managing military supply chains and transitioning to a clean energy future will require not only clearer understanding, but also pragmatic and realistic solutions.” Minerals and rare earth elements such as lithium, gallium, and rhenium are critical elements for many defense technologies (e.g. jet engines, satellites, missiles, etc.) and alternative energy sources (batteries and wind turbines). Parthemore argues that U.S. policy should focus on preventing suppliers from exerting undue leverage (as China did in 2010), mitigating fiscal risk and cost overruns, reducing disruption vulnerability, and ensuring the United States is able to meet its growth goals in clean energy and other high-tech fields.

    In a report from the U.S. Air War College, author Stephen Burgess writes of the potential for conflict over competition for “strategic minerals” in five southern African states: South Africa, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Zambia, Zimbabwe, and Namibia. The report, titled “Sustainability of Strategic Minerals in Southern Africa and Potential Conflicts and Partnerships,” states that growing industrial countries like China will compete, potentially aggressively, with the United States for sustainable access to elements such as chromium, manganese, cobalt, uranium, and platinum group metals. Burgess recommends that the United States become more engaged in southern Africa by providing development assistance to mining communities and developing strategic partnerships.
    Topics: Africa, China, energy, environment, military, minerals, natural resources, Reading Radar
    • http://www.adelphi.de Lukas Ruettinger

      Beyond supply risks – the conflict potential of natural resources

      The public debate about resource conflicts as well as the CNAS report are often focused on a cursory analysis of the security of supply. More profound risk dimensions are thus usually ignored. adelphi and the Wuppertal Institute for Climate, Energy and Environment have made a thorough analysis of risks and conflict potentials linked with natural resources, including the mining transport and supply of raw materials.

      A total of eight research reports were developed, presenting different case studies and scenarios until the year 2030. Specifically, the case studies looked at lithium in Bolivia, rare earth elements in China, copper and cobalt in the Democratic Republic of Congo, as well as the Nabucco gas pipeline project. Along with the analyses of solutions in terms of their effectiveness in various risk dimensions, the reports are including concrete action and research recommendations. They also provide new perspectives on resources crucial to new energy supply, in the context of developing renewable energy sources and attaining ambitious climate protection goals.

      The reports are the result of the two-year research project “Identification and mitigation of international conflict risks linked to natural resources” implemented by adelphi and the Wuppertal Institute on behalf of the Federal Environment Agency.

      The reports can be downloaded here:

      (1) Conflict risks (GERMAN only)
      http://www.adelphi.de/files/de/news/application/pdf/rohkon_bericht_1_konfliktrisiken.pdf

      (2) Supply and demand (GERMAN only)
      http://www.adelphi.de/files/de/news/application/pdf/rohkon_bericht_2_angebot&nachfrage.pdf;

      (3) Case Study: Nabucco Pipeline (GERMAN only)
      http://www.adelphi.de/files/de/news/application/pdf/rohkon_bericht_3-1_nabucco.pdf

      (4) Case Study: Congo
      http://www.adelphi.de/files/de/news/application/pdf/rohkon_report_3.2_congo.pdf

      (5) Case Study: Bolivia
      http://www.adelphi.de/files/de/news/application/pdf/rohkon_report_3.3_bolivia.pdf

      (6) Case Study: China
      http://www.adelphi.de/files/de/news/application/pdf/rohkon_report_3.4_china.pdf

      (7) Conflict resolution strategies (GERMAN only)
      http://www.adelphi.de/files/de/news/application/pdf/rohkon_bericht_4_konfliktminimierungsansaetze.pdf

      (8) Recommendations
      http://www.adelphi.de/files/de/news/application/pdf/rohkon_report_5_recommendations.pdf

    • Pingback: Annie parthemore | Kiroset()

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