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Politics : The Environmentalist Thread -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: miraje who wrote (25121)9/3/2009 10:43:37 AM
From: miraje1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 36921
 
Something the alternative energy folks never mention. Where are we going to get the materials...

Shortage of Rare Earths Used in Hybrids, TVs May Loom in China

By Bloomberg News

Sept. 3 (Bloomberg) -- China said supplies of dysprosium and terbium, minerals needed to make hybrid cars and televisions, may be inadequate for its own needs, adding to concerns that the largest producer of rare earths may further cut exports.

China, accounting for more than 90 percent of global rare- earth output, “may not have enough supply” of the two minerals as demand increases, Wang Caifeng, deputy director-general of the raw materials department at the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, said today.

Surging production of hybrid cars and music players such as Toyota Motor Corp.’s Prius and Apple Inc.’s iPod have driven up demand for rare earths. China has cut export quotas to shore up prices and ensure domestic supplies, though there will be no ban on exports of the elements, Wang said today.

“The rest of the world has become a little concerned” about possible export bans from China, said Judith Chegwidden, managing director at London-based Roskill Information Services Ltd, an industry research group. “Dysprosium is increasingly used in permanent magnet motors in hybrid cars like Prius or wind turbines. Demand is growing fast.”

China has about half of the world’s reserves of rare earths, a range of more than 15 elements such as scandium and lanthanum. The government started to curb output and exports in 2006 as prices dropped, and Zhao Shuanglian, deputy chief of China’s Inner Mongolia province yesterday said the country may stockpile elements in a strategic reserve.

That could force companies to broaden their search for other suppliers.

Toyota Alternatives

“We’re always exploring alternative procurement sources,” said Paul Nolasco, a spokesman for Toyota, declining to comment specifically on China’s policy. Neodymium, a type of rare earth, is used to make the electric motor of its Prius car, he said.

Chinese exports of rare earths fell 35 percent to 34,600 metric tons in 2008 from 53,300 tons in 2006, according to Inner Mongolia Baotou Steel Rare-Earth Hi-Tech Co., which owns the largest rare-earths mine. The company was yesterday tasked to take over smaller rivals in Inner Mongolia to strengthen control over supplies.

“Demand is growing in areas of military defense, missiles, electronic information and green energy,” Wang said at a conference in Beijing. “Modern society can’t do without cell phones and televisions.”

China needs 70,000 tons of rare earths a year, she said. China cut 2009 output quotas of rare earths by 8.1 percent from a year ago to 119,500 tons, the Ministry of Industry of Information and Technology said May 18.

Waste

Terbium is a silvery-white metal used to make alloys and phosphors used in lamps and TV tubes. Other rare earths include neodymium, which is also used in mini hard drives in laptops and headphones in Apple’s iPod. Yttrium and europium are used to generate red on color TV and computer monitor screens.

China is also tightening control of mining for rare earths because it can lead to “serious pollution,” Wang said. To mine a ton of the material could lead to 2,000 tons of dirt and waste, she said.

The Asian country is also encouraging producers of minor metals to export processed products rather than raw materials to increase the value of shipments, said Liang Shuhe, deputy head of foreign trade at the Ministry of Commerce.

Minor metals include antimony, magnesium, zirconium, mercury and bismuth, according to the Minor Metals Trade Association. China’s Jinduicheng Molybdenum Co. is Asia’s largest producer of molybdenum, used to harden steel.

“The majority of China’s minor metals exports remain in the raw material form,” Liang said at the conference. “We encourage exports of high value-adding, high-end products instead of the raw materials.”

--Feiwen Rong, Xiao Yu. Editors: Tan Hwee Ann, Richard Dobson

To contact the reporters on this story: Feiwen Rong in Beijing at frong2@bloomberg.net; Xiao Yu in Beijing on yxiao@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: September 3, 2009 04:54 EDT

Message 25914173



To: miraje who wrote (25121)9/3/2009 11:05:26 AM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 36921
 
"You can put that bud of reality in your bong and fire it up"

Rat laughed; not because he had to, but because he had two.
Also, he knew that new large hydro is no longer considered part of the renewable portfolio. It's why Cal would give me a rebate on panels, but not for putting a microhydro turbine on my creek. Run of river, wave generators are renewable.

Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS)
A The Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS) is a regulatory framework that requires states to generate a certain amount of electricity from renewable energy sources. For instance, under its RPS, California aims to generate twenty percent of its electricity from qualifying renewable energy sources by December 31, 2010. To accomplish this goal, most state RPS programs require utilities to buy a certain percentage of their electricity from renewable sources.

One of the key elements of an RPS is the types of energy sources that qualify as renewable. Typically, solar and wind are the most preferred renewable energy sources in an RPS. Since the goal of an RPS is to encourage the development of new renewable energy sources, most states don't let existing hydropower qualify. However, each state treats hydropower in its own way. In some states, hydropower is restricted by size (e.g. 200 MW in Vermont) while in others it is restricted by technology (e.g. pumped storage does not qualify in Maryland).

The Coalition supports inclusion of following types of hydropower in an RPS standard:

Hydropower generated from efficiency improvements at existing facilities.
Hydropower generated from capacity additions at existing facilities.
Hydropower projects that take additional steps to protect the local system- for example, through the Low Impact Hydropower Institute's certification program.
However, we do not support inclusion of hydropower generated from new dam construction or capacity added through operational changes (e.g. a change to release schedule).
hydroreform.org

“Month-after-month, the U.S. government’s own numbers refute those attempting to dismiss or belittle the rapidly expanding role being played by renewable energy sources in the nation’s electricity supply,” said Ken Bossong, Executive Director of the Sun Day Campaign. “Moreover, non-hydro renewables are already well beyond the levels of the Renewable Electricity Standard proposed in energy legislation now being considered by before the U.S. Senate, which calls for just 3 percent renewables by 2013.”