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We Might Not Have Enough Materials for All the Solar Panels and Wind Turbines We Need, an Analysis Finds (popularmechanics.com) 367

An anonymous reader writes: Plenty of high-tech electronic components, like solar panels, rechargeable batteries, and complex circuits require specific rare metals. These can include magnetic neodymium, electronic indium, and silver, along with lesser-known metals like praseodymium, dysprosium, and terbium. These metals are mined in large quantities in countries around the world, and they make their way into the supply chains of all sorts of electronics and renewables companies.

A group of researchers from the Dutch Ministry of Infrastructure determined how many of these important metals will be required by 2050 in order to make enough solar panels and wind turbines to effectively combat climate change. With plenty of countries, states, cities, and companies pledging to go 100 percent renewable by 2050, the number of both solar panels and wind turbines is expected to skyrocket. According to the analysis, turbines and solar panels might be skyrocketing a bit too much. Demand for some metals like neodymium and indium could grow by more than a dozen times by 2050, and there simply might not be enough supply to power the green revolution.

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We Might Not Have Enough Materials for All the Solar Panels and Wind Turbines We Need, an Analysis Finds

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  • FUD (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mspohr ( 589790 ) on Friday December 14, 2018 @12:06PM (#57803464)

    Popular Mechanics? Idiots.
    Solar panels don't use "rare earth" elements (and rare earth elements are not rare).

    • Solar panels don't use "rare earth" elements

      Not all renewable energy is photovoltaic. The dynamo in a wind turbine uses rare earth magnets.

      • by mspohr ( 589790 ) on Friday December 14, 2018 @12:12PM (#57803512)

        There’s a persistent myth about wind turbines that just won’t seem to go away despite reality running to the contrary: they need rare earth materials to generate electricity.
        For those not acquainted with rare earths like neodymium and dysprosium, they’re used in products from your iPhone and computer to flat screen TVs and certain types of batteries.
        While they can be difficult to mine, rare is a misnomer: they exist in abundance throughout the earth’s crust.
        Many people think rare earths are also a necessary component of wind turbines, but the facts find otherwise: only about two percent of the U.S. wind turbine fleet uses them, and that number shouldn’t change much in the years to come.

        https://www.aweablog.org/rare-... [aweablog.org]

        • by Shaitan ( 22585 ) on Friday December 14, 2018 @12:36PM (#57803672)

          You do realize this article is in fact an analysis of these materials and their accessible quantities and the determination that THERE ARE NOT ENOUGH OF THEM for the demand required through 2050. Rare is a subjective term this is quantative analysis of what is actually there not guesswork based on the word "rare" which you are battling. Abundant within the Earth's crust isn't particularly meaningful, we can't get to all the earths crust by a long shot and not all of what we can get to is easily accessible or cheaply accessible and even if we can get to it easily and cheaply we can still only pull it out so fast.

          • by thomst ( 1640045 )

            Shaitan remonstrated:

            You do realize this article is in fact an analysis of these materials and their accessible quantities and the determination that THERE ARE NOT ENOUGH OF THEM for the demand required through 2050. Abundant within the Earth's crust isn't particularly meaningful, we can't get to all the earths crust by a long shot and not all of what we can get to is easily accessible or cheaply accessible and even if we can get to it easily and cheaply we can still only pull it out so fast.

            The major problems with the supply of rare earths are:

            1. Their ores most commonly occur intermixed with uranite, so refining them entails the production of radioactive waste, and
            2. They are not yet commonly recycled.

            There's no real getting around the radioactive waste issue (although, if widespread support for licensing and constructing new nuclear power plants develops over the coming decades, I expect that REE separation and refining operations will become a routine feature of any n

          • by asylumx ( 881307 )
            "There are not enough of them" and "there are not enough being mined & refined" are not necessarily the same problem. I imagine production levels could change over the next 30 years, potentially in drastically different manner than this study is assuming. In fact, a study like this could be the catalyst for such a change in production.
        • Yes, something that exists as 0.0033% of the crust isn't rare. We won't even get into the tiny fractions of a percent of that fraction of a percent that are actually in a position where mining is either economically or technologically possible. Or that governments wouldn't hold out and go to war over the resources when they even are able to be mined in an area.

          "But, but, my non science based website says these elements aren't rare, even though the site owner probably cant spell Geologist or even mineral w

          • by Dragonslicer ( 991472 ) on Friday December 14, 2018 @02:51PM (#57804472)

            Yes, something that exists as 0.0033% of the crust isn't rare. We won't even get into the tiny fractions of a percent of that fraction of a percent that are actually in a position where mining is either economically or technologically possible. Or that governments wouldn't hold out and go to war over the resources when they even are able to be mined in an area.

            "But, but, my non science based website says these elements aren't rare, even though the site owner probably cant spell Geologist or even mineral without resorting to a dictionary!"

            The surface area of the Earth is 5*10^8 km^2. The USGS says the thickness of the crust is 30 km, so the volume is 1.5*10^10 km^3. At your percentage, that would be 5*10^5 km^3 of whichever rare earth metal you're talking about. Let's take neodymium as an example, with a density of 7 g/cm^3, or 7*10^12 kg/km^3. That would be a total of 3.5*10^18 kg of neodymium in the Earth's crust. If only one millionth of that is accessible, that would still be enough for every person on Earth to have their own MW-scale wind turbine.

      • by jeff4747 ( 256583 ) on Friday December 14, 2018 @12:14PM (#57803524)

        The dynamo in a wind turbine currently uses rare earth magnets.

        FTFY.

        Neodymium magnets are used to make the generators smaller and a little more efficient. We already have other materials that will do the job, it will just be larger or a little less efficient. And if neodymium ends up being the bottleneck, well we'll get to figure out more about magnetism since we'll have a huge incentive for an alternative.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Shaitan ( 22585 )

          Or we could just... build nuclear. Wind kills birds and disrupts air currents in the same manner that harvesting tidal energy or damming falls does. These technologies significant impact existing natural energy flows with consequences that in some cases we likely don't even know about yet. The same is probably true of suddenly sucking up all that light energy which should be reflecting around and warming things over a huge portion of the Earth's surface.

          Nuclear on the other hand isn't harnessing and disrupt

          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            I always felt nuclear was the true green energy. Unfortunately since enthusiasm about nuclear has cooled down and the paranoia created by Chernobyl and three mile island it seems like we'll never get to the next generation of reactors that can use all the "spent" rods we've been piling up. Even if there was no hope of ever being able to re-use the spent rods then at least they could be buried deep inside the Yucca mountain range underground where.. y'know.. the uranium came from to begin with; underground.
            • by cb88 ( 1410145 )
              No events and worried about it is cautious, one even in a very long time and you're worried about it maybe a little parranoid, a second event under separately engineered system from the same error maybe still a little paranoid, but after all that and a 3rd event occurs it's starting to move into maybe we should not do this until we can design in passive failsafe's cost effectively territory.

              If we ever figure out fusion... then it'll be a no brainer.
            • by jeff4747 ( 256583 ) on Friday December 14, 2018 @02:11PM (#57804250)

              it seems like we'll never get to the next generation of reactors

              Good.

              Take a look at the history of the "next generation of reactors". They never quite live up to the hype. For example, pebble beds didn't turn out so good when they were actually built. And that pattern repeats itself over and over again.

              Also, you're kinda glossing over the teeny-tiny problem of nuclear weapons proliferation if we're all supposed to start using breeder reactors.

          • by atrex ( 4811433 )

            The same is probably true of suddenly sucking up all that light energy which should be reflecting around and warming things over a huge portion of the Earth's surface.

            Considering that too much of that light energy being trapped and reflected around thanks to greenhouse gases is the problem causing climate change, absorbing more of it should only benefit us in combating the problem.

          • You really don't know nuclear then.

            Nuclear tends to warm the lakes it dumps into. yes it does through multiple heat exchangers. Check out how nuclear functions. Especially the cooling systems.

            So nuclear is just as environmentally alternating as everything else.

            • Compared to other environmental effects, waste heat is the least important of the impacts of any power source. It also has numerous industrial uses.

          • by dryeo ( 100693 )

            Yes, turbines kill some birds, so do windows in buildings, which kill more and those same buildings disrupt the wind. Then there are cats, which kill many more birds, but at least don't disrupt the wind unless you plant trees for the cats to climb.

          • by q_e_t ( 5104099 )

            Or we could just... build nuclear.

            Which use generators to turn heat into electrical power... So are more efficient with neodymium.

      • by burni2 ( 1643061 )

        Please, don't call it a dynamo :) call it a generator - dynamo reminds me too much of a bicycle.

        • generators using rare earth magnets

        But you are "mostly" wrong on the rare earth magnets, some wind turbines use them in so called permanent excited generators, were the permanent excitation comes from rare earth magnets. Those generators are also synchronous generators, all their electrical power output needs to be channeled through a frequency converter to make it grid compatible.

        Rare earth magnets have a very h

    • Best turn around; scrap everything. Drill baby drill!
    • Re:FUD (Score:4, Insightful)

      by MobyDisk ( 75490 ) on Friday December 14, 2018 @12:30PM (#57803616) Homepage

      RTFA before trying to debunk it. The article and linked research explains what rare earth elements are, their respective rarities, which things use them, how much is used, and what they cost. Your comment adds nothing meaningful.

      • Re:FUD (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Zorpheus ( 857617 ) on Friday December 14, 2018 @12:38PM (#57803694)
        Does it talk about alternaives though?
        Indium is used in the transparent conductor Indium Tin Oxide. There are alternatives, such as Aluminium tin Oxide. Not as good, but it will be used if we are running out of Indium.
        And others already wrote that Neodymium is not needed for wind turbines. It is just a generator in there, it can be built in many different ways.
      • by mspohr ( 589790 )

        And TFA is completely wrong.

  • by AlanObject ( 3603453 ) on Friday December 14, 2018 @12:09PM (#57803486)

    I guess we should just call off all the green initiative stuff (hippy liberal anyway) and fire up more coal plants.

    • by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Friday December 14, 2018 @12:28PM (#57803600)

      I guess we should just call off all the green initiative stuff (hippy liberal anyway) and fire up more coal plants.

      I'm buying all the beachfront property in Oregon for when it becomes the new tropical tourist hot-spot.

    • At least fossil fuels and green tech have the same mantra now. Drill baby drill!

      Finally some unity.

    • I think we should emphasize more on the glowing green revolution. Nuclear power doesn't get the kind of love and attention it deserves but unfortunately I think people are paranoid about nuclear reactors and therefore there is no political willpower to back it and get us to the next generation of reactors.
  • by wizkid ( 13692 ) on Friday December 14, 2018 @12:11PM (#57803494) Homepage

    Details on the Evening news.

    Note, as time goes on, we find better ways to build this kind of stuff. By 2050, it's likely we'll have more efficient systems, and we'll find ways to build this stuff with less rare-earth materials.

  • Of course (Score:5, Funny)

    by jlowery ( 47102 ) on Friday December 14, 2018 @12:15PM (#57803532)

    They stopped teaching alchemy in schools ages ago, and now look where we are.

  • by munch117 ( 214551 ) on Friday December 14, 2018 @12:17PM (#57803538)
    There are so many different ways of building wind turbines. Neodymium and indium is used today because it's readily available. When it becomes scarce, we will come up with different designs. Or maybe we will just find new places to dig neodymium and indium out of the earth. This is not a real problem.
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by es330td ( 964170 )

        but I'm having a hard time understanding why rare metal shortages would eliminate the possibility of making more wind turbines.

        It isn't that that they can't be made; instead, it changes the cost-benefit equation. Let's say for example that element Imaginium improves the efficiency of generator windings by 50% and has the same mass as copper. A generator motor will then weigh substantially less than one using only copper. This then means that the tower to support the generator can be made with less material and the blades to turn it will have less stress. Removing the Imaginium then increases the cost and increases the lifetime main

  • the crust of the earth is 20 miles thick.

    the elements in use in fiber optics and magnets are not rare at all.

    we've "barely scratched the surface"

    there will be no shortages, it's impossible

    • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *

      he crust of the earth is 20 miles thick.

      I am not a geologist, but a rational person would also expect the heavier/denser stuff to settle closer to the bottom than to the top, over time...

    • Drill baby drill.

    • Rarity has nothing to do with it. The problem is the economic cost of mining them. People have commented that the ocean is full of Lithium so why worry about that. The reason people aren't extracting it is that it isn't economically feasible. The more costly it becomes to produce electricity, the more your utility rates will jump. The bigger the holes and the deeper the mines and the more associated waste and environmental destruction ensues from going after the rare earths, the more people will scream. The

  • by necro81 ( 917438 ) on Friday December 14, 2018 @12:22PM (#57803562) Journal
    I predict that when the coming resource crunch comes, if ever, the rising price of such-and-such raw material will rise enough that an alternative will emerge. Neodymium too costly? You can make a perfectly good electric generator using other magnets or inductance. Indium too expensive? Well, perhaps we won't use as many CIGS solar panels, and instead stick with silicon.

    And, who knows, we'll probably be prospecting asteroids by 2050. If the cost for certain materials on earth is high enough, there may be a business case for it. Indium costs about $5/gram presently, or $5M/tonne. If there's a resource crunch and the cost goes up, say, 5-fold, perhaps someone will have enough incentive to mine asteroid indium for $25M/tonne.
  • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) * on Friday December 14, 2018 @12:22PM (#57803568)
    I'm pretty sure if we can mill grain and pump out seawater using canvas, wood, hemp and stone, we'll figure something out. These materials are not required for alternative energy production. They're required for efficient alternative energy production. What we lose is efficiency. OK, build more. Or even better, stop making babies.
  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Friday December 14, 2018 @12:27PM (#57803590) Journal
    1. The known reserves of these elements today, will be the same reserves we will have till 2050

    2. The known techniques and cost for extracting them today, will be the same till 2050

    3. Similar study done in 1868 would have concluded there is not enough oil in Pottsville, PA to replace coal as a major source of fuel

    4. Similar study done in 1750 would have concluded there is not enough coal to replace whale oil as a fuel for lighting

    5. Similar study done in 1550 would have concluded the known reserves of whales and the cost of extracting oil from their blubber would be prohibitive and wax candles will be used forever for lighting.

    • Silicon Dioxide is all over the place! Most abundant stuff on earth. We also have a lot of aluminum which is easy to recycle.

      Lithium might be an issue for a while until we adapt... as we did in history. Recycling will eventually be the future. Rare magnets are NOT at all required for generators; or electric motors for that matter; it's not the end... maybe of cheap Chinese neodymium which might even be found as cheaply elsewhere.

      Besides, all these matters are usually about CHEAP easy sources running out ta

  • by Seven Spirals ( 4924941 ) on Friday December 14, 2018 @12:31PM (#57803626)
    Last time I checked digging a hole in the ground didn't require any rare Earth metals. There are places where you don't even have to dig down very far to be able to create steam. I know that not all areas are suitable (swamp might be tough for example), but it seems like the real miracle technology we need right now isn't just some cheap form of producing energy it's more that we need a cheap way to *store* it and *move* it. Liquid fuels provide tremendous energy density and are pretty ideal other than their CO2 issues. So, I wish that the efficiency of tech to convert CO2 to wood alcohol (running a fuel cell "backwards") would improve or something like that would emerge. Imagine building a solar farm in the desert but then using trucks, trains, or pipelines to move liquid fuels anywhere they are needed. Tidal power also seems like an easy win, but I'm no energy scientist or mechanical engineer; so I realize I'm just wishing and speculating.
  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Friday December 14, 2018 @12:36PM (#57803668)
    All perfectly doable if we can just stop fighting among ourselves and spending 1/3 of our entire civilization's output on war and war profiteering.

    Also, human population is in decline where ever you find significant technical civilization. Assuming we don't regress (which, don't get me wrong, a not insignificant portion of humanity wants to) then it's a problem that will solve itself. People don't actually breed uncontrollably if they've got options. Japan, Singapore and now the US with their declining birthrates prove that.

    Folks mostly have a ton of kids as a kind of makeshift retirement program and between automation and productivity increases we just aren't going to need the vast labor pool we used to. We are going to need a way to distribute the wealth from the bots an A.I.s. Either that or we're going have have a dystopia where the 1% have everything and the rest of the world looks like a mix of Ethiopia, Somalia and the worst years of the American Indian Reservations.
  • I remember when they were predicting lithium shortages for EVs. Didn't happen. It may be that environmentalists have to decide which of their loathed pollutions to live with: byproduct of magnet materials or carbon, but the materials can be obtained if not outlawed.

  • There countries actually working on the problem.
    https://spaceresources.public.... [public.lu]

  • If we can make mirrors we can make solar plants that use molten salt (which can work for baseline as it continues to produce energy after the sun sets).

    And they look awesome!

    https://gbtimes.com/asias-firs... [gbtimes.com]

  • There will be high levels of innovation to drive down cost/find more efficient ways to design said solar panels and wind turbines.
    2050 is in 32 years. Enough said.

  • See? Donald Trump knew this all along and that's why he's opening up the way for more coal production. I would even go so far as to say that he's a very stable genius. Randy thinks so too! https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
  • I expect that in the 32 years prior to 2050, if our supply of "rare earths" becomes an issue then we'll either find a way to create them artificially or find alternative elements or methods that don't require them.
  • Check.

    Stop worrying.

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