... no desert to hot, no ice cap too cold, to keep us from raping the planet.
The Arctic is said to hold up to 13 percent of the world's undiscovered oil reserves, and 30 percent of undiscovered gas deposits; though how anyone can put limit figures on unknowns is anybody's guess. The race is on to get at these riches.
Licences are being awarded to mine the ocean beds. A five million sq km area of the Pacific known as the Clarion-Clipperton Zone is thought to have more than 27 billion tonnes of nodules lying on the sand - nodules that contain nickel, copper, manganese and cobalt. Nobody has any idea of how destructive gathering them will be, but we will do it anyway.
Gold. copper and silver have been found under the Gobi desert - nearly 5 billion tonnes of it. The mining of it will last for decades. Meanwhile, due to deforestation and overgrazing, the Gobi is advancing southwards and eating up 3,600 sq km of good agricultural land every year.
Over in the high Andes large deposits of coal, oil and natural gas, iron ore, gold, silver, tin, copper, phosphates and nitrates and aluminium (bauxite) are found. Peru's Yanacocha gold mine is the largest in the world. This open cast mine has its rocks containing gold blasted with dynamite. The pulverised rock is then sprayed with cyanide and the gold extracted from the solution. This can, and does, contaminate water supplies.
With all of these projects as potential money spinners is it any wonder that climate change is not really being tackled seriously?