LATimes   June 14, 2010
 
U.S. finds mineral riches in Afghanistan, Afghan  official says
 
 
la-fgw-0615-afghan-minerals-20100615  



KABUL, Afghanistan — 
U.S. geologists have discovered vast mineral wealth in Afghanistan,  
possibly amounting to $1 trillion, President Hamid Karzai's spokesman said  
Monday.

Waheed Omar told reporters the findings were made by the U.S.  Geological 
Survey under contract to the Afghan government.

"The result of  the survey … has shown that Afghanistan has mineral 
resources worth $1  trillion," Omar said. "This is not an overall survey of all 
minerals in  Afghanistan. Whatever has been found in this survey is worth $1 
trillion."

Omar refused to provide details, referring reporters to the Ministry of  
Mines. An official at the ministry refused to discuss the survey, saying 
details  would be released at a news conference later this week.

A 2007 report by  the USGS said most of the data on Afghanistan's mineral 
resources was produced  between the early 1950s and 1985 but much was hidden 
and protected by Afghan  scientists "during the intermittent conflict over 
the next two  decades."

The New York Times reported the $1 trillion figure in Monday's  edition and 
quoted senior American officials as saying untapped mineral deposits  in 
Afghanistan are far beyond any previously known reserves and were enough to  
fundamentally alter the Afghan economy and perhaps the Afghan war  itself.

Americans discovered nearly $1 trillion in untapped mineral  deposits in 
Afghanistan, including iron, copper, cobalt, gold and critical  industrial 
metals like lithium, according to the report. The Times quoted a  Pentagon memo 
as saying Afghanistan could become the "Saudi Arabia of lithium,"  a key 
raw material in the manufacture of batteries for laptops and cell  phones.

"There is stunning potential here," the newspaper quoted Gen.  David H. 
Petraeus, commander of the United States Central Command as saying.  "There are 
a lot of ifs, of course, but I think potentially it is hugely  significant."

Geologists have known for decades that Afghanistan  contained substantial 
mineral resources, including copper, gold and cobalt. But  the resources have 
never been fully exploited because of decades of armed  conflict and poor 
infrastructure. The Times said huge lithium deposits were  found in Ghazni 
province -- much of which is effectively under Taliban  control.

During a visit last month to Washington, Karzai said his  nation's untapped 
mineral deposits could be even higher -- perhaps as much as $3  trillion.

The mineral resources are a "massive opportunity," Karzai said  at a May 13 
event with Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton held at the  U.S. 
Institute of Peace.

The report in the Times said the USGS began  aerial surveys of 
Afghanistan's mineral resources in 2006, using data that had  been collected by 
Soviet 
mining experts during the Soviet occupation of  Afghanistan in the 1980s. 
Promising results led to a more sophisticated study  the next year.

Then last year, a Pentagon task force that had created  business 
development programs in Iraq arrived in Afghanistan and closely  analyzed the 
geologists' findings. U.S. mining experts were brought in to  validate the 
survey's 
conclusions, and top U.S. and Afghan officials were  briefed.

"I think it's very, very big news for the people of Afghanistan  and that 
we hope will bring the Afghan people together for a cause that will  benefit 
everyone," Karzai's spokesman, Omar, said. "This is an economic interest  
that will benefit all Afghans and will benefit Afghanistan in the long  run."

So far, the biggest mineral deposits discovered are of iron and  copper, 
but finds include large deposits of niobium, a soft metal used in  producing 
superconducting steel, as well as rare earth elements and large gold  
deposits in Pashtun areas of southern Afghanistan, the report said. Many of  
those 
areas are too dangerous because of Taliban activity.

Charles  Kernot, a mining analyst with Evolution Securities Ltd. in London, 
said it  typically takes three to five years to get a lithium mining 
operation up and  running. Factors include how close the deposit is to power 
sources and other  infrastructure and the size of the deposit.

And large lithium deposits  may not mean an automatic windfall -- given 
competition and the uncertainty of  the market.

"Bolivia wants to expand its lithium mining operations  dramatically over 
the next few years so there is a risk of oversupply if demand  from electric 
cars does not meet expectations," Kernot said. 
Copyright 2010 Associated  Press
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