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    Shortage of Rare Metals Could Threaten High-Tech Innovation

    A world in need of faster computers, smarter phones and more energy-efficient light bulbs threatens to strain the small supply of rare metals used by the global electronics industry. But limits on the production of such rare metals mean the supply can't easily expand to meet the demand for innovation in both consumer electronics and clean technologies.

    Scarce metals such as gallium, indium and selenium — known as "hitchhiker" metals — come only as byproducts of mining major industrial metals such as aluminum, copper and zinc. That makes it hard to simply boost production of hitchhiker metals whenever industries face a shortage, even if the metals have become critical components of everything from high-performance computers to solar panels.

    "With respect to metals that are hitchhikers, a higher price isn't going to lead to much more production," said Robert Ayres, a physicist and economist based at the international business school INSEAD in France. "And therefore it's much more important to think in terms of conservation, recycling and substitution."

    That sobering message was delivered by Ayres at a Royal Society discussion meeting held in London Jan. 30. He wants both governments and industries to come up with a standard recycling process that could reuse rare metals.

    "You produce something, you use it, but you don't just toss it in a landfill; it goes to another stage and another, and eventually the rare materials are recovered," Ayres told InnovationNewsDaily. "At present, hardly any are recovered."

    Take gallium as an example. Gallium is a small byproduct of mining bauxite and zinc, but it has become a critical component for technologies such as lasers, energy-efficient LED lighting and solar panels. The metal has also become a replacement for silicon in faster microchips powering the latest generation of smartphones.

    U.S. demand for gallium relied upon $66 million of overseas imports in 2011, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. And just one company, in Utah, recovered and refined gallium from scrap metal and impure gallium metal.

    Indium has become a crucial ingredient in the liquid crystal displays for smartphones and in some types of solar panels. A third hitchhiker metal, selenium, also forms part of the solar panels containing both gallium and indium.

    Ayres worries in particular about rare metal shortages crippling innovation in clean energy technologies such as solar power.

    "Tellurium, part of the lowest-cost photovoltaic material, is only available from copper refineries," Ayres pointed out. "And so the quantity available in the world isn't anywhere near enough to satisfy the potential demand for thin-film photovoltaic surfaces (solar panels)."

    This story was provided by  InnovationNewsDaily, a siste site to LiveScience. You can follow InnovationNewsDaily Senior Writer Jeremy Hsu on Twitter @ScienceHsu. Follow InnovationNewsDaily on Twitter @News_Innovation, or on Facebook.

     

    46 comments

    • a  •  Columbia, South Carolina  •  3 mths ago
      you are correct, but government regulation regarding reclamation centers is overwhelming... I looked into stating one last year, but the environmental regualtions were so many that I figured I would just open a gun shop
      • cynical1 3 mths ago
        Instead of using clay disks, just use old cell phones for skeet practice. Kill two birds with one stone.
      • a 3 mths ago
        totally cool!!
    • THE BANISHED  •  3 mths ago
      China actually has over 80% of the world's deposits of rare earth metals....and are using that and their cheap labor costs to gain advantage to control the market on things such as computer chips, light bulbs and much much more. We are pretty well screwed on these items for a while.....
    • dead-on  •  Trinidad, Colorado  •  3 mths ago
      While these electronics SHOULD be recycled, when there is NO local place to submit them for recycling, AND it costs MORE to send them to recyclers than it cost to buy the items in the first place; AND the landfill will NOT accept them UNLESS they are in your garbage pickup; what do you do?
      You throw them in the trash, is what!
    • J  •  3 mths ago
      Do they realize how much waste there is from electronics? How many people just throw them away. They should have better recycling programs even if half of the componants are trash they can still recover the other materials used in production.
      • Gary 3 mths ago
        .......Then there was the article some time ago about the town in China, that gets all the cast-off computer and other electronic fol-de-rol........Seems they were complaining about the high pollution-borne sickness and mortality rates there.
    • Max Fubar  •  3 mths ago
      There are PLENTY of asteroids that carry the rare earths, so isn't that where we should be looking to get to? Think of the lone mining astronaut, spends 2-3 years mining in space, returns to Earth a multi billionaire with a few tons of rock.
      • Alvin 3 mths ago
        Too bad it takes 10 years to get there and 10 back. So this is true once in lifetime job.
      • J 3 mths ago
        they wouldnt be called earths since earth is one planet.
      • Max Fubar 3 mths ago
        Two things, ten years if if you don't want to invest in fuel. Secondly, the term Rare Earths doesn't mean the planet, just the minerals in them which are considered to be TRACE and thereby RARE EARTHS!
    • MARK  •  Meriden, Connecticut  •  3 mths ago
      THE GREATEST SHORTAGE FACING AMERICAN....is not that of rare materials....but rather that of RARE CREATIVE INTELLECT..... WHICH WITHOUT....THERE IS NO FUTURE....
    • Mark  •  3 mths ago
      I had a vision just now.Mushroom clouds everywhere as the last inhabitants scrramble to recycle cell phones so they can still keep up with tweets.
    • Gary  •  3 mths ago
      ..........being a packrat, dumpster-diver and scrap-metal collector...........I wonder , sometimes out loud, just how much of these "rare" earth minerals are floating around up there in the recently infamous "space junkyard "
      There has GOT to be some way of getting all that back down here w/o it being incinerated by re-entry,
    • JJMurray  •  3 mths ago
      Maybe a shortage of rare metals will instead inspire a new kind of technical innovation where these metals are not required? Now wouldn't THAT be innovative?
    • Charles  •  Macon, Georgia  •  3 mths ago
      If a lot of these rare metals are being dumped into landfills, then mine the old landfills.
    • SisyphusSyzygy  •  San Jose, California  •  3 mths ago
      Do you suppose the shortage has anything to do with them being rare?
    • timbuck 2  •  3 mths ago
      Who needs clean air, water, food and environment. As long as we can use our smart phones and get the latest scores, sales, news or whatever else might interest us we'll be just fine. But don't smoke around me or my kids you'll ruin our health.
    • Mars  •  3 mths ago
      Believe it or not this is a good thing. Stop making so many products. Let's use what we have already made. We could all use with a good slow down of nonessential consumables.
    • America  •  3 mths ago
      Buy MCP
      • cynical1 3 mths ago
        Try Stans Energy (HREEF) could be a diamond in the rough. Ucore has a project in Alaska that is being sponsored by the US Dept of Defense. You might be interested in Focus Metals and Northern Graphite for graphite, the largest component of Li-ion batteries.
    • Smart Enough  •  3 mths ago
      Isn't that why we are in Afghanistan. If it wasn't for the trillions of $s in rare metals we wouldn't be there. Interesting how that works Huh
      • Hgldr 3 mths ago
        No. We are in Afghanistan because every American is concerned about their freedom. Hah! just kidding.
      • Alvin 3 mths ago
        Guess who is locking up those mineral rights? Chinese. Why are they always thinking 10 years ahead of us? Maybe our system of 2 parties is always giving away the future to those who corrupt our politics.
      • cynical1 3 mths ago
        We're there to keep an eye on our opium crop. Opium and heroin use lots of dollars in international transactions. We need all the help we can get to keep our dollar strong since the Russians, Chinese and Indians are using less of them in trade. Same dynamic for the Lat. Amer. drug cartels and weapons dealers.
    • Brian  •  3 mths ago
      Afghanistan is loaded with those metals... both pure in raw!
    • wow  •  3 mths ago
      The article failed to mention that we have plenty of rare earth metals. However, it is very polluting to mine them. Thus, we try to force China to sell to us! It is OK to pollute other countries, but not US!
    • Lance  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  3 mths ago
      The first major commercial space venture will likely be a mining operation, not tourism.
    • 2good  •  3 mths ago
      I thought I read where we have found we have much more of these rare metals in California than we first thought. Who is not telling the truth. . .Washington?
    • Marty  •  3 mths ago
      MINE the nations trash dumps!
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