eddie-soehnel-portable-iden.../data/insights-hub/hrecords/4282.json
2026-06-16 13:20:04 -06:00

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{
"HubID": "4282",
"Date": "5/17/2024",
"HubTags": [
"External Platform Posts",
"Future Map Forward Guidance",
"Future Map"
],
"Contacts": "",
"Companies": "",
"File": "",
"Image": "",
"Summary": "<p>Copper can't be mined fast enough to electrify. </p><p>We have two twin challenges: (1) just keeping up with electricity needs; (2) transitioning to green. <br /></p><p>The authors estimate just to keep up - forget transitioning to green infrastructure - the world will need to mine 115% more copper than has been mined in all of human history up until 2018. Our future is one of resource constraints, unlike the recent past where from 1945 till about 2015, we had an era of abundance and got just about anything we wanted, when we wanted it. We will have to make decisions about what we want to do with the resources we have. <br /></p><p>However, the problem according to the authors appears to be the permitting process to bring on new mines, which takes average of 20-years. We have the know how, tech and resources, we just need to speed up the process. <br /></p><p>https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2024/05/240515164309.htm#google_vignette<span></span><br /></p>",
"Notes": ""
}