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ellisonz

(27,776 posts)
16. Do you know what makes many of those phones work?
Fri Mar 9, 2012, 06:11 AM
Mar 2012


Ethics of Coltan mining in the Democratic Republic of Congo

Conflicts, including the Rwandan occupation in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) made it difficult for the DRC to exploit its coltan reserves. Mining of the mineral is mainly artisanal and small-scale[citation needed]. A 2003 UN Security Council report[17] charged that a great deal of the ore is mined illegally and smuggled over the country's eastern borders by militias from neighbouring Uganda, Burundi and Rwanda.[18]

Coltan smuggling likely provides income for the military occupation of Congo[citation needed], as well as prolonged civil conflict, according to an activist website, Toward Freedom.[19][dead link]

To many[who?], this raises ethical questions akin to those of conflict diamonds. Owing to the difficulty of distinguishing legitimate from illegitimate mining operations, several processors such as Cabot Corp (USA) have decided to forgo central African coltan altogether, relying on other sources.[citation needed]

Toward Freedom claims that the 2000 launch of the Sony PlayStation 2 increased demand for tantalum electrolytic capacitors, causing the world price of coltan to increase sharply, in turn resulting in accelerated mining of the Congolese hills containing coltan. Sony claims it has discontinued its use of tantalum acquired from the Congo, sourcing it from other countries. However, Towards Freedom claims that some of it must have come from the Congo.[19][dead link]

All three countries named by the United Nations as smugglers of coltan have denied being involved. Austrian journalist Klaus Werner has documented links between multi-national companies like Bayer and the illegal coltan traffic.[20] A United Nations committee investigating the plunder of gems and minerals in the Congo listed in its final report[17] approximately 125 companies and individuals involved in business activities breaching international norms. Companies accused of irresponsible corporate behavior are for example the Cabot Corporation,[21] Eagle Wings Resources International[22] Forrest Group[23] and OM Group.[24]

Much coltan from the DRC is being exported to China for processing into electronic-grade tantalum powder and wires.[25]

Estimates of the Congo's fraction of the world's coltan reserves range from 64%[26] to 80%.[27] Tantalum, the primary mineral extracted from Coltan is also mined from other sources, and Congolese coltan represented around 10% of world production in recent years.[28][29]
[edit]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coltan#Ethics_of_Coltan_mining_in_the_Democratic_Republic_of_Congo

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