London: Geologists have sounded the warning bells over shortage of some metals owing to an insatiable demand for consumer goods.
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"More than a billion people will buy a mobile phone in a year - so that's quite a lot of metal. And then there's the neodymium in your laptop, the iron in your car, the aluminium in that soft drink can - the list goes on," Jenkin said, the journal Nature Geoscience reports.
"It is reassuring that there's no immediate danger of 'peak metal' as there's quite a lot in the ground, still - there will be shortages and bottlenecks of some metals like indium due to increased demand," Jenkin said, according to a Leicester statement.
"That means that exploration for metal commodities is now a key skill. It has never been a better time to become an economic geologist, working with a mining company. It's one of the better-kept secrets of employment in a recession-hit world.
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So, our appetite for technological goodies will be satisfied for some time to come still, he said.
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Jenkin convened the Fermor Meeting of the Geological Society of London to discuss metal shortages.