(CFACT, Paul Driessen) USofA - Modern societies require minerals and mining

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Link: www.cfact.org Please see link above for source text, embedded hotlinks and comments. As opposed to 40% of our oil imports in 1973, the United States now imports 50-100% of 35 minerals deemed critical for our modern defense, energy, medical and other technologies. Among the reasons is that the vast majority of US lands with the greatest mineral potential have been placed off limits to exploration and mining. Now several members of Congress have proposed House and Senate bills that would make it even more difficult to address this growing problem – and could even destroy the remnants of a once vibrant US mining industry. As Ned Mamula and I suggest, Congress should be helping to fix our minerals crisis – not making it even worse. Thank you for posting our article, quoting from it, forwarding it to your friends – noting that Ned is my coauthor and including his bio in the post. Best regards, Paul Driessen

Modern societies require minerals, and mining Congressional bills would end US mining and leave USA dependent on foreign critical materials Paul Driessen and Ned Mamula July 13, 2019 When OPEC imposed its 1973 embargo, the United States was just over 40% dependent on foreign sources for its oil. But sudden price hikes and shortages severely disrupted families and businesses. Today the USA relies on foreign sources for 100% of 14 minerals considered to be “critical” for modern technologies and societies, and 50-96% for 19 other “critical” minerals; only two are in the 14-25% dependency range, an updated report from the US Department of the Interior (DOI) cautions.

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