Is The World Really Running Out Of Sand?

Is The World Really Running Out Of Sand?

Reprinted with permission from Creators.

 

Little known fact: Practically every skyscraper in every one of the world’s cities is essentially made of sand. As are nearly all shopping malls, condo complexes, office towers, parking garages, airport terminals, dams and other large structures. America builds with concrete — gabillions of tons of it — and concrete is nothing but sand mixed with a bit of gravel and water, then bound together with cement and a few other ingredients, and allowed to harden. In addition, every glass window in those structures is made of melted sand. Then there’s the network of transportation routes we navigate to reach each of those buildings — millions of miles of highways, tunnels, streets, subways, sidewalks, and airport runways — all mostly made of concrete or asphalt — all comprised mostly of sand.

As evermore people migrate to cities, sand follows to accommodate them. Mountains of sand are poured into constructing new homes. “A typical American house requires more than a hundred tons of sand, gravel, and crushed stone… and more than 200 tons if you include its share of the street that runs in front of it,” David Owen reported this May in The New Yorker magazine.

Two other huge sand hogs are devouring ever-increasing volumes of this resource: Beach restoration and Big Oil fracking.

We humans are extracting an unbelievable amount of these tiny grains of rock to construct our modern life, using more sand today than any other natural resource besides water. Another little-known fact: The world is starting to run out of usable sand.

“Huh?” you might ask in disbelief. The planet has vast deserts that are spreading at alarming rates, and the climate-change forecasts say more and quicker desertification is coming at us. But the key adjective is “usable,” and desert sand grains are too small and rounded to make concrete or asphalt. And while nature does constantly create more sand, it can’t create nearly enough at a rate fast enough to keep up with the rapacious extraction by industries, governments and our world’s teeming population.

The rush to grab every last speck of sand on the planet is no day at the beach. Many billions of dollars are at stake, so the journey from nature to concrete draws many thousands of players vying for a cut of the profits. While many sand peddlers make some effort to minimize the damages, many more don’t care what their plundering is doing to the Earth and its inhabitants.

Thus, whether the operators are corporate elites or black-market gangs, much of the global sand trade is corrupt and barely monitored by officials. So, the humble commodity itself is being ripped from Mother Earth.

No nation is immune from this pandemic of madness:

—Farmers in Minnesota and Wisconsin are blaming the recent boom of sand mining throughout their area for polluting their water and air.

—In the Indian state of Kerala, the Manimala River has flowed for centuries over natural sand beds, serving the people there as a permanent aquifer. Since 2002, however, this natural deposit has been scooped out. Along the river’s route, several major bridges faced collapse, because the loss of sand had weakened their foundations. And with the sand gone, their river is now barely a trickle.

—In India, Cambodia, Indonesia, Kenya and elsewhere, environmental activists, journalists and defiant locals have been imprisoned and even murdered for standing in the way of the piles of “dirty money” being exchanged these days in the dark business of extracting innumerable tons of tiny rock specks.

Common, seemingly-abundant sand is not something that politicians, media or even the major environmental organizations have thought much about. Yet, there is an urgent need for us to pay attention, for sand is an invaluable, finite and fast-disappearing natural resource — one that is essential as a balancing force in Earth’s intricate ecology and as a building block for all of humanity. At the very least, we can no longer afford to allow the world’s elites and profiteers to keep plundering this special gift from nature only to hoard it in their exclusive sandboxes. As Vince Beiser wrote last year in a New York Times op-ed, just as the world has been learning to “conserve, reuse, find alternatives for, and generally get smarter about how we use [other] natural resources… that’s how we need to start thinking about sand.”

Populist author, public speaker, and radio commentator Jim Hightower writes The Hightower Lowdown, a monthly newsletter chronicling the ongoing fights by America’s ordinary people against rule by plutocratic elites. Sign up at HightowerLowdown.org.

 

Start your day with National Memo Newsletter

Know first.

The opinions that matter. Delivered to your inbox every morning

Sucking Up: House Republicans Want To Give Trump A Gold Medal

Rep. Matt Gaetz outside the New York Supreme Court for Trump trial on May 15, 2024

Donald Trump

The first Congressional Gold Medal was struck in 1776 as a way of saying thanks to George Washington. Since then, the medal has been awarded just 184 times to hallowed figures including Mother Teresa, Rosa Parks, Nelson Mandela, and the Dalai Lama. Compared to the 647 civilian Presidential Medals of Freedom or the 3,517 military Medals of Honor, the Congressional Gold Medal is the rarest of the great honors awarded in America.

Keep reading...Show less
Rudy Giuliani

Rudy Giuliani

Rudy Giuliani's efforts to help Donald Trump overturn the 2020 presidential election results have resulted in both civil lawsuits and two criminal indictments for the former New York City mayor. Giuliani is among Trump's co-defendants in Fulton County, Georgia District Attorney Fani Willis' election interference case, and in late April, he was indicted by a grand jury in a separate election interference case being prosecuted by State Attorney General Kris Mayes, a Democrat, in Arizona.

Keep reading...Show less
{{ post.roar_specific_data.api_data.analytics }}