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    Home ยป The Cobalt Paradox: How the Clean Energy Revolution Runs on One of the World’s Dirtiest Supply Chains
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    The Cobalt Paradox: How the Clean Energy Revolution Runs on One of the World’s Dirtiest Supply Chains

    Crop ProtectionBy Crop ProtectionApril 24, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
    The Cobalt Paradox: How the Clean Energy Revolution Runs on One of the World's Dirtiest Supply Chains
    The Cobalt Paradox: How the Clean Energy Revolution Runs on One of the World's Dirtiest Supply Chains
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    A boy, no older than twelve, is crouched in a pit he helped dig himself somewhere in the southeast of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, close to Kolwezi. He is surrounded by loose walls. The tools he is holding are hardly tools at all; they may be a chipped hammer or a bent piece of rebar. The sky above him is the same carefree blue you’d see over a Californian beach, where someone is most likely plugging in a brand-new electric sedan and quietly feeling good about the world right now. There seems to be no connection between the two scenes. Yes, they are.

    The paradox at the heart of Nicolas Niarchos’s latest book, The Elements of Power, is one that no one who is pitching you a clean energy future wants to deal with for very long. The concentration of cobalt, the brittle, bluish metal that prevents lithium-ion batteries from catching fire, in the DRC is so high that Saudi Arabia’s control over oil seems almost amateurish. Congolese territory is home to about 70% of the world’s supply. Furthermore, since colonial times, there hasn’t been any significant change in how much of it emerges from the ground. pits excavated by hand. bare hands. According to Niarchos, children skip school in order to pay for their education.

    Key Information Details
    Subject The Cobalt Paradox in the Clean Energy Transition
    Primary Source Country Democratic Republic of the Congo
    Global Cobalt Share (DRC) Approximately 70%
    Book Referenced The Elements of Power by Nicolas Niarchos
    Publisher Penguin Random House, Jan 20, 2026
    Author Background Journalist โ€” The New Yorker, The Nation, The New York Times
    Processing Dominance China refines 70โ€“90% of critical battery metals
    Key Minerals Involved Cobalt, lithium, copper, tin, tantalum, tungsten
    Human Rights Concerns Child labor, forced labor, birth defects, mine collapses
    Governance Review Natural Resources Journal, Vol. 66
    Pages / Format 480 pages, hardcover
    Recognition Edward R. Murrow Award (2023), Livingston Award shortlist (2024)

    The cultural silence surrounding this has a very peculiar quality. There was a time for blood diamonds. Fast fashion sweatshop labor had its moment. Somehow, cobalt continues to elude us. It’s possible that the plot is simply too inconvenient; the villain isn’t a fossil fuel CEO in a corner office, but rather the courteous presumption that making the switch to an EV is morally right in and of itself. As this happens, it’s difficult to ignore how neatly the blame vanishes into a supply chain that is too lengthy for any one buyer to feel accountable for.

    The geopolitics are a silent thriller in and of themselves. China spent twenty years covertly purchasing mines and constructing refineries while Western capitals were busy celebrating their climate pledges. Approximately 70โ€“90% of the world’s essential battery metals are currently processed in Beijing. There isn’t a supply chain there. It’s a chokehold. American sanctions and tariffs have begun to arrive loudly, but there is a significant lead, and catching up appears to be difficult.

    The Cobalt Paradox: How the Clean Energy Revolution Runs on One of the World's Dirtiest Supply Chains
    The Cobalt Paradox: How the Clean Energy Revolution Runs on One of the World’s Dirtiest Supply Chains

    In contrast, the audits read like a play. Child labor at particular mines is flagged in documents. Production is still going on. Sometimes things worsen. According to reports published in the Natural Resources Journal by researchers like Ashleigh Wootton, the voluntary, international, and domestic regulatory frameworks just don’t work. Communities close to the mines have the highest rates of congenital birth defects on Earth, heavy-metal contamination in their water, and collapses that swallow family members, according to multiple studies. Naturally, invisible at the point of sale.

    This does not imply that the transition should be abandoned. Niarchos himself seems to think that ethical mining can be done on a large scale and that regular consumers have more power than they realize, even if it’s just by keeping a phone for four years rather than two. It remains to be seen if that pressure ever makes it to the pit where the boy is still excavating. One that the industry has been content to ignore thus far.

    The Cobalt Paradox: How the Clean Energy Revolution Runs on One of the World's Dirtiest Supply Chains
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