Regional Mineral Industry Review Of Africa (7f148b71-72dd-4ef3-aebf-200117eba72a)

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Thomas C. Denton
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
231
File Size:
84747 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1967

Abstract

In 1965 Africa maintained its position as a region of the world essential to advanced non-Communist nations for supply of vital metals and minerals. The position stemmed from the fact that Africa produced in large quantity a number of key minerals of which either or both resources and production capacity elsewhere did not approach the needs of the free world. The Republic of South Africa alone contributed more than three quarters of the gold mined in the entire non-Communist world besides an estimated 60 percent of metals of the platinum group and the entire new supply of amosite asbestos, and Africa as a whole was nearly the non-Communist world's only source of gem and industrial diamond. Africa also accounted for 83 percent of non-Communist world cobalt production. Besides these massive contributions, Africa in 1965 provided 50 percent or more of the new supply from non-Communist countries of the following mineral commodities: Lithium minerals, corundum, manganese ore: and chromite, and over 20 percent of new supply from non-Communist countries of columbium-tantalum concentrates, antimony, beryl, vanadium, phosphate rock, and copper. Africa also accounted for 18 percent of the non-Communist world's output of uranium, 14 percent of its tin, 11 percent of its lead, 9 percent of its zinc, and 8.9 percent of its crude oil output. With respect to chromite, at yearend Africa's reserves of the mineral were far larger than those of all other non-Communist regions combined. This probably also held true for manganese ore. In the case of crude oil, the fact that Africa's share of non-Communist world output was 1.6 percentage points greater than in 1964 was significant, particularly inasmuch as the output rate was continuing to increase at yearend.
Citation

APA: Thomas C. Denton  (1967)  Regional Mineral Industry Review Of Africa (7f148b71-72dd-4ef3-aebf-200117eba72a)

MLA: Thomas C. Denton Regional Mineral Industry Review Of Africa (7f148b71-72dd-4ef3-aebf-200117eba72a). The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1967.

Export
Purchase this Article for $25.00

Create a Guest account to purchase this file
- or -
Log in to your existing Guest account