Delong said:
I'm just wondering what is the long term effect of mining in general. I have read a lot of the immediate effects of mining to the environment that are mostly bad but I was wondering what happens in the long term if we keep mining. We will run out of minerals or is there so much that it would not be a problem? Also if would it matter if we run out of minerals since we can just recycle the ones we already have? Do we eventually return the minerals we have to the Earth or do we keep them in our economy/technology forever once we have mined them? Thanks.
I would hope that reprocessing comes online within the next 50 years as a consequence of increased environmental awareness.
Apart from that, however, as an exploration geologist working in Canada, I cannot forsee any shortage of mineable, terrestrial ore on the scale of 200-300 years (obviously that's a very tenuous estimantion because it's stilll uncertain what humanity's technological and engineering arc will take over that time frame). Canada has very extensive government surveys, federally and provincially, and some of the most intense hard-rock exploration on the planet and we're still at the stage of having Johnny Twosmokes stumble over a showing while hunting for moose/tending his marijuana patch. There's a lot of untapped shield out there which still needs to be mapped at a scale of less than 1:50 000, to say nothing of extensive drill programs that come with locating and defining a deposit.
In some cases, we have known, significant reserves of chromium in layered mafic intrusions, but haven't had the economic impetus to develop them because other deposits (i.e. Bushveld complex, South Africa) are decades away from depletion. Rare-Earths are unexplored and Canada, and have only hit our radar in the past year or two since an awareness of China and the political aspects of supply have risen to our consciousness.
Bottom line: the resources are there.
Off into the future, rising economic costs and increased technology will likely allow us to explore near-Earth objects, be they asteroids, the Moon, or even Mars. That's pure speculation; though, in my mind, reasonable.