Dystopic lake of world's tech lust
Hidden in an unknown corner of Inner Mongolia is a toxic, nightmarish
lake created by our thirst for smartphones, consumer gadgets and green
tech, discovers Tim Maughan.:
From where I'm standing, the city-sized Baogang Steel and Rare Earth
complex dominates the horizon, its endless cooling towers and chimneys
reaching up into grey, washed-out sky. Between it and me, stretching
into the distance, lies an artificial lake filled with a black,
barely-liquid, toxic sludge.
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Black sludge pours into the
lake - one of many pipes lining the shore.
Credit: Liam Young/Unknown Fields |
Dozens of pipes line the shore, churning out a torrent of thick,
black, chemical waste from the refineries that surround the lake. The
smell of sulphur and the roar of the pipes invades my senses. It feels
like hell on Earth.
Welcome to Baotou, the largest industrial city in Inner Mongolia. I'm
here with a group of architects and designers called the Unknown Fields
Division, and this is the final stop on a three-week-long journey up the
global supply chain, tracing back the route consumer goods take from
China to our shops and homes, via container ships and factories.
You may not have heard of Baotou, but the mines and factories here
help to keep our modern lives ticking. It is one of the world's biggest
suppliers of "rare earth" minerals. These elements can be found in
everything from magnets in wind turbines and electric car motors, to the
electronic guts of smartphones and flatscreen TVs. In 2009 China
produced 95% of the world's supply of these elements, and it's estimated
that the Bayan Obo mines just north of Baotou contain 70% of the world's
reserves. But, as we would discover, at what cost?
Element of success
Rare earth minerals have played a key role in the transformation and
explosive growth of China's world-beating economy over the last few
decades. It's clear from visiting Baotou that it's had a huge,
transformative impact on the city too. As the centre of this 21st
Century gold-rush, Baotou feels very much like a frontier town.
In 1950, before rare earth mining started in earnest, the city had a
population of 97,000. Today, the population is more than two-and-a-half
million. There is only one reason for this huge influx of people -
minerals. As a result Baotou often feels stuck somewhere between a brave
new world of opportunity presented by the global capitalism that depends
on it, and the fading memories of Communism that still line its Soviet
era boulevards. Billboards for expensive American brands stand next to
revolution-era propaganda murals, as the disinterested faces of Western
supermodels gaze down on statues of Chairman Mao. At night,
multicoloured lights, glass-dyed by rare earth elements, line the larger
roads, turning the city into a scene from the movie Tron, while the
smaller side streets are filled with drunk, vomiting refinery workers
that spill from bars and barbecue joints.
Even before getting to the toxic lake, the environmental impact the
rare earth industry has had on the city is painfully clear. At times
it's impossible to tell where the vast structure of the Baogang
refineries complex ends and the city begins. Massive pipes erupt from
the ground and run along roadways and sidewalks, arching into the air to
cross roads like bridges. The streets here are wide, built to
accommodate the constant stream of huge diesel-belching coal trucks that
dwarf all other traffic.
After it rains they plough, unstoppable, through roads flooded with
water turned black by coal dust. They line up by the sides of the road,
queuing to turn into one of Baotou's many coal-burning power stations
that sit unsettlingly close to freshly built apartment towers.
Everywhere you look, between the half-completed tower blocks and hastily
thrown up multi-storey parking lots, is a forest of flame-tipped
refinery towers and endless electricity pylons. The air is filled with a
constant, ambient, smell of sulphur. It's the kind of industrial
landscape that America and Europe has largely forgotten - at one time
parts of Detroit or Sheffield must have looked and smelled like this.
One of our first visits in the city is to a processing plant that
specialises mainly in producing cerium, one of the most abundant rare
earth minerals. Cerium has a huge number of commercial applications,
from colouring glass to making catalytic converters. The guide who shows
us around the plant explains that they mainly produce cerium oxide, used
to polish touchscreens on smartphones and tablets.
Quiet plant
As we are wandering through the factory's hanger-like rooms, it's
impossible not to notice that something is missing. Amongst the mazes of
pipes, tanks, and centrifuges, there are no people. In fact there's no
activity at all. Apart from our voices, which echo through the huge
sheds, the plant is silent. It's very obviously not operating. When
asked, our guide tells us the plant is closed for maintenance - but
there's no sign of that either: no maintenance crews, no cleaning or
repairs being done. When pushed further our guide gets suspicious,
wonders why we are asking so many questions, and clams up. It's a
behaviour we'll encounter a lot in Baotou - a refusal to answer
questions or stray off a strictly worded script.
One of Baotou's other main exports is neodymium, another rare earth
with a variety of applications. Again it is used to dye glass,
especially for making lasers, but perhaps its most important use is in
making powerful yet lightweight magnets. Neodymium magnets are used in
consumer electronics items such as in-ear headphones, cellphone
microphones, and computer hard-drives. At the other end of the scale
they are a vital component in large equipment that requires powerful
magnetic fields, such as wind farm turbines and the motors that power
the new generation of electric cars. We're shown around a neodymium
magnet factory by a guide who seems more open than our friend at the
cerium plant.
We're even given some magnets to play with. But again, when our
questions stray too far from applications and to production and
associated environmental costs, the answers are less forthcoming, and
pretty soon the visit is over.
The intriguing thing about both neodymium and cerium is that while
they're called rare earth minerals, they're actually fairly common.
Neodymium is no rarer than copper or nickel and quite evenly distributed
throughout the world's crust.
While China produces 90% of the global market's neodymium, only 30%
of the world's deposits are located there. Arguably, what makes it, and
cerium, scarce enough to be profitable are the hugely hazardous and
toxic process needed to extract them from ore and to refine them into
usable products.
Mineral mixtures
For example, cerium is extracted by crushing mineral mixtures and
dissolving them in sulphuric and nitric acid, and this has to be done on
a huge industrial scale, resulting in a vast amount of poisonous waste
as a byproduct. It could be argued that China's dominance of the rare
earth market is less about geology and far more about the country's
willingness to take an environmental hit that other nations shy away
from.
And there's no better place to understand China's true sacrifice than
the shores of Baotou toxic lake. Apparently created by damming a river
and flooding what was once farm land, the lake is a "tailings pond": a
dumping ground for waste byproducts.
It takes just 20 minutes to reach the lake by car from the centre of
the city, passing through abandoned countryside dominated by the
industrial architecture on the horizon. Earlier reports claim the lake
is guarded by the military, but we see no sign. We pass a shack that was
presumably a guard hut at one point but it's abandoned now; whoever was
here left in a hurry, leaving their bedding, cooking stove, and instant
noodle packets behind when they did.
We reached the shore, and looked across the lake. I'd seen some
photos before I left for Inner Mongolia, but nothing prepared me for the
sight. It's a truly alien environment, dystopian and horrifying.
- BBC Future |