Re: The Climate, Environment and Energy Thread
Reply #460 –
Guess what is becoming the next big environmental issue, with a push to restrict / limit resource consumption to be floated at the next COP meeting?
Environmental damage from the production of batteries!
What will that mean long term for the use of EVs or Home Solar Batteries?
Functionally, we need a new battery technology and quickly, perhaps even faster than we need more renewable energy! Lithium mining is a disaster, and battery production is one of the dirtiest industries on the planet, perhaps even dirtier than the fossil fuel industries it replaces. Ignore those posters showing lab like pristine conditions with efficient machinery pumping out mass produced batteries by the metre. That lab is the con, the last shiny stage of the process at best, what they don't show you is the filthy bucket chemistry and sweat shop conditions used to refine and prepare the raw materials.
Even though lithium is abundant, naturally occurring lithium of the required quality is very rare. For example Australia is one of the worlds richest lithium sources, but the vast bulk of the lithium mined in Australia has to be greatly enriched before it can be used, much like we have to reprocess and enrich uranium and pretty much any other materials we mine. Guess what, like our Iron Ore and Aluminium much of which is no longer refined here, we ship it offshore in bunker fuel burning antifouling coated biohazard bulk barges for refining elsewhere!
None of that you will find the Uber Green TBL investor report, just a little accounting oversight, we can put the revised numbers in later via are mailout! 
And those tailings, yes the evil word again which describes mining waste, can be reprocessed to produce all sorts of ancillary raw materials, but they aren't in much the same way tailings from other mining operations aren't reprocessed. Sure, they are selling the fact that they can, but what they omit from the marketing blurb is that they don't, they don't because it's expensive and inefficient to reprocess tailings when you can go somewhere else and get what you need from a rich vein. And much like refining or reprocessing uranium, the further you get through the process the bigger the problem becomes with the residual.
The stuff left behind from battery production is truly toxic as is pretty much any other form of mass industrial waste.
But luckily we've got a border policy, that waste and the toxic environment and atmosphere it creates will just have to stay in China, because we won't give it a VISA!
Best Regards,
Your Loving Nimby!