10/06/10
At Bloomberg
A Quick Introduction to "Rare Earths"
You may or may not have ever heard the term Rare Earth before.
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Wikipedia has an entry on Rare Earths. If
you don't read the whole thing, at least look at the table that
lists the 17 rare earths and what they are used for in today's
scientific, electronic and military applications. In case you
overlooked it, there was also an important sentence in the text:
"China now produces over 97% of the world's rare earth supply,
mostly in Inner Mongolia."
Bloomberg has an interesting little video that illustrates the problem with China being the sole source of Neodymium, a soft metallic element which is critical to the manufacture of guided bombs and missiles for the U.S. military. If you don't see any reason to be concerned about a potential enemy being the sole source of a critical weapon component, well, don't you worry about it. There are more important things to worry about. - Like who should be a judge on American Idol and should what's her name get one more chance at probation? Like, let's get real, huh?
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"May you live in interesting times." is said to be an old Chinese curse. - I think that's where we're living now, and we're cursed.
Bummer.
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