Consent and costs are key questions on extraction of ‘energy transition’ minerals

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Flu Season is Approaching – Is Influenza Really Something to Worry…New Web Hosting Pioneer Emerges, Offering Affordable Hosting Solutions Coupled with…The many environmental, social, and health impacts of extracting minerals that power renewable energy, mobile phones and electric vehicles need more debate and detailed media coverage, an Indigenous rights activist and journalist say on the podcast.

Research indicates as much as 54% of all transition minerals are on or near Indigenous land, however, no nation has properly implemented the protocols of Free Prior and Informed Consent , a framework that’s key to ensuring that local communities are aware of, benefit from – and especially are not harmed by – such activities.

Minerals and metals used in technologies enabling much of the global energy transition and their applications are relatively new and require thought and reporting that probes questions related to their need, the growing social, human and environmental. Together on this episode of the Mongabay Newscast, they detail critical questions that journalists, policy makers, and citizens should be asking themselves regarding transition minerals.

 

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