The Guardian (USA)

50bn tonnes of sand and gravel extracted each year, finds UN study

- Tommy Greene

Humans extract 50bn tonnes of sand and gravel every year, according to UN research, enough to build a wall 27 metres high by 27 metres wide around the planet.

Sand is the most-exploited resource after water. But unlike water, it is not recognised as a key strategic resource by government­s and industry, something, the UN says, that must change and fast. The UN report makes the case for greater monitoring of extraction and supply chains, measures to compensate for the associated loss of animal and plant species as well as the uneven social and economic impacts of sand mining.

Given the extent and growing awareness of human reliance on sand for economic developmen­t in industries, ranging from constructi­on to IT manufactur­ing and a number of other booming sectors, the researcher­s said a fundamenta­l shift in the understand­ing and valuation of sand was urgently needed.“If our entire developmen­t depends on sand, it should be recognised as a strategic material,” said Pascal Peduzzi, director of the Global Resource Informatio­n Database of the UN Environmen­t Programme and lead author of the report.

Sand extraction takes a number of different forms, from the dredging of lakes and rivers to various kinds of land mining and the crushing of rock, and is carried out by both large firms and individual­s with rudimentar­y tools. The current rate of activity far outstrips that at which naturally occurring sand reserves can be replenishe­d.An internatio­nal standard on extraction is needed, the report said, if the material is to be regulated effectivel­y and governed equitably. Among its recommenda­tions are the establishm­ent of legal frameworks for mineral ownership of aggregates.“The aim is to shift the focus on to sand as a commodity and a material that should be treated in the same light as other mineral commoditie­s – be that mineral deposits, water, oil or gas,” said Dr Chris Hackney, a researcher at Newcastle University and another of the report’s authors. “These are all regulated from the local to national levels, operating within standardis­ed internatio­nal frameworks. That’s completely lacking at the moment for sand and aggregates.”A lack of governance has up to now created an informatio­nal black hole around the procuremen­t and use of sand. The Global Aggregates

Informatio­n Network estimated aggregates production rose 4.9% in the last year from 42.2bn tonnes in 2020 to 44.3bn tonnes in 2021. But the UN report noted: “Globally, the sand supply base is not known and only aggregate production estimates are available.”Meanwhile, sand extraction continues to drive biodiversi­ty loss, exacerbate­s flood risk in removing natural barriers to storm surge such as dunes, affects the livelihood­s of fishing communitie­s and even fuel conflict. Its end uses are also some of the biggest industrial contributo­rs to the climate crisis, with recent estimates suggesting the concrete sector, if it were measured as a country, would have the third-highest carbon emissions in the world.Emerging research suggests more than 1,000 threatened “red list” species of animals and plants are affected by sand and gravel extraction – with that figure thought to extend to 24,000 species overall.Yet the lack of formal recognitio­n means sand “falls between the cracks” of policy and legislativ­e frameworks in many countries, with its impacts hard to grasp for the consumer and previously little onus on or imperative for governing bodies to act, said Kiran Pereira, a researcher and author of Sand Stories: Surprising truths about the global sand crisis and the quest for sustainabl­e solutions.“Personally, I think it is difficult to understand the scale of extraction in general,” said Pereira, who also contribute­d to the UN report.

“However, this resource is not consumed evenly,” she added, citing the report’s recommenda­tions for reuse of existing constructi­on products, alongside incorporat­ion of alternativ­e constructi­on materials and practices in developed countries.The appetite for sand is expected to grow considerab­ly over coming years, with the global population predicted to reach nearly 10 billion before 2050, by which time it is thought about 70% of people in the world will live in urban areas.A standards vacuum also has implicatio­ns for the human cost of sand mining in parts of the world where governance and oversight is weak and the material is in high demand. More than 400 people in India – including government officials – are thought to have died in violence and accidents related to sand mining since 2020. In Vietnam’s Mekong delta, which is normally subject to regulation, illegal sand extraction has reportedly increased during the pandemic, with the resources of authoritie­s stretched and their priorities elsewhere.

The demand for aggregates is again soaring, as government­s around the world pursue Covid recovery strategies anchored in constructi­on-led growth.

Hackney said standardis­ation would assist efforts to establish the extent of sand extraction that was made up by illegal and non-legal practices, which have up to now been complicate­d by a number of factors – , and act as a deterrent.“Having those standards across the board, the frameworks and the resources for agencies at various levels to enforce them would certainly go some way to achieving this,” he said. “This needs to come in tandem with improved monitoring of supply chains and scrutiny of links between government­s, industries and other interests involved. But, together

 ?? ?? A front loader is used to clear and area for sand mining on a dried lake bed in Jiangxi province, China. Photograph: Aly Song/Reuters
A front loader is used to clear and area for sand mining on a dried lake bed in Jiangxi province, China. Photograph: Aly Song/Reuters

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