Sand is the second-most used resource after water
Sand is the second-most used resource after water
Sources: Elhacham et al. (2020), Hackney et al. (2021), UNEP (2022)
Sand is the second-most used resource after water
Sources: Elhacham et al. (2020), Hackney et al. (2021), UNEP (2022)
Interesting, but they neglect to mention why desert sand is unusable.
Only some sands are suitable for the construction industry, for example for making concrete. Grains of desert sand are rounded by being blown in the wind, and for this reason do not produce solid concrete, unlike the rough sand from the sea.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sand#Resources_and_environmental_concerns
That's a bit confusing because the article also says this
Sand from rivers are collected either from the river itself or its flood plain and accounts for the majority of the sand used in the construction industry.
Sand dredging in the Mekong is a major problem.
So am I correct in guessing it at least (if quartz sand) can be used for microchips and the likes? I hope the rough sands aren't extrated just to be used in something, were other, less scarce sands could be used - but I could at least imagine stuff like economy of scale, existing infrastructure and special interest of the established industries could actually cause that.
In case you don't know, desert sand is very smooth, which means that it doesn't bind at all in e.g. concrete. For cement, concrete etc., you need sharp sand, which has more 'sharp' bits for things to bind to.
Easy. Just put the desert sand in a magic bullet to make more edges.
This recent video by Business Insider talks about it and shows how it’s mined. It comes down to the shape.
Problem is sand is being dredged from poor areas that rely on shallow water environments for survival, aka fishing. Companies come in, take all the sand, destroy the environment in the process by deepening these shallow water environments and driving away all the fish - leaving the local population destitute as the local government recieves the payout without them seeing a cent.
They stole a whole beach in Jamaica.
Locals went to bed with a beach and woke up to the sand missing in the morning.
Since I started following a low-sand diet I now consume at most a few spoonfuls per day (mostly during breakfast). Every little thing counts.
Since the graphic claims microchips are made out of "sand", I will call silica "sand". To get a spoon full of "sand", some random internet sources suggests that it would weigh about 33g, and apparently oats is quite dense in "sand", so youd need about 176 kg of oats, or about 27,000 spoonfulls of oats to satisfy your diet of "sand". Impressive!
(Or maybe you just eat it raw as a anti-caking agent?)
anything but the metric system