American Talk
  • Home
  • Business
  • Leadership
  • Economics
  • Recruitment
  • Innovation
  • Strategy
  • More
    • Customer Experience
    • Managing People
    • Managing Yourself
    • Communication
    • Marketing
    • Organizational Culture
    • Technology
Featured Posts
    • Managing People
    To Curb Burnout, Design Jobs to Better Match Employees’ Needs
    • March 21, 2023
    • News
    Why Thomas Edison should be considered the patron saint of homeschooling
    • March 21, 2023
    • Customer Experience
    Understanding Customer Experience
    • March 21, 2023
    • Business
    London police force should be overhauled or broken up, says review
    • March 21, 2023
    • Managing Yourself
    Keeping Your Confidence Up During a Lengthy Job Search
    • March 21, 2023
Featured Categories
Business
View Posts
Communication
View Posts
Customer Experience
View Posts
Economics
View Posts
Hiring and Recruitment
View Posts
Innovation
View Posts
Leadership
View Posts
Managing People
View Posts
Managing Yourself
View Posts
Marketing
View Posts
News
View Posts
Organizational Culture
View Posts
Press
View Posts
Strategy
View Posts
Technology
View Posts
Trending
View Posts
American Talk
7K
9K
4K
1K
American Talk
  • Home
  • Business
  • Leadership
  • Economics
  • Recruitment
  • Innovation
  • Strategy
  • More
    • Customer Experience
    • Managing People
    • Managing Yourself
    • Communication
    • Marketing
    • Organizational Culture
    • Technology
  • News

Joe Rogan podcast guest explains ‘heart-wrenching’ source of electric vehicle, iPhone batteries in viral video

  • December 23, 2022
  • admin
Total
0
Shares
0
0
0

A Harvard visiting professor and modern slavery activist exposed the “appalling” cobalt mining industry in the Congo on a recent episode of “The Joe Rogan Experience” that went viral. The video has already racked up over one million views and counting.

Siddharth Kara, author of “Cobalt Red: How The Blood of The Congo Powers Our Lives,” told podcast host Joe Rogan that there’s no such thing as “clean cobalt.’”

“That’s all marketing,” Kara said. 

Kara told Rogan that the level of “suffering” of the Congolese people working in cobalt mines was astounding. 

BIDEN TURNS TO COUNTRY WITH DOCUMENTED CHILD LABOR ISSUES FOR GREEN ENERGY MINERAL SUPPLIES: ‘IT’S EGREGIOUS’

Podcast giant Joe Rogan reacted to a guest’s stories of the cobalt mining industry in a recent episode.
(The Joe Rogan Experience/Spotify)

When asked by Rogan if there was any cobalt mine in the Congo that did not rely on “child labor” or “slavery,” the Harvard visiting professor told him there were none. 

“I’ve never seen one and I’ve been to almost all the major industrial cobalt mines” in the country, Kara said. 

One reason for that is that the demand for cobalt is exceptionally high: “Cobalt is in every single lithium, rechargeable battery manufactured in the world today,” Kara explained. 

As a result, it’s difficult to think of a piece of technology that does not rely on cobalt to function, Kara said. “Every smartphone, every tablet, every laptop and crucially, every electric vehicle” needs the mineral.

The Democratic Republic of the Congo is one of the poorest nations in the world. (AP Photo/Clarice Butsapu)

The Democratic Republic of the Congo is one of the poorest nations in the world. (AP Photo/Clarice Butsapu)

GREEN ENERGY PROJECTS FACE STARK ENVIRONMENTAL, LOCAL OPPOSITION NATIONWIDE

“We can’t function on a day-to-day basis without cobalt and three-fourths of the supply is coming out of the Congo,” he added. “And it’s being mined in appalling, heart-wrenching, dangerous conditions.” 

But “by and large the world doesn’t know what’s happening” in the Congo, Kara said. 

“I don’t think people are aware of how horrible it is,” Rogan agreed. 

The Biden administration recently entered into an agreement with the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Zambia to bolster the green energy supply chain, despite the DRC’s documented issues with child labor. 

ENVIRONMENTAL GROUPS KEEP PUSHING EXTREME MEASURES AMID GLOBAL ENERGY CRISIS

Cobalt initially “took off because it was used in lithium-ion batteries to maximize their charge and stability,” Kara explained. “And it just so happened that the Congo is sitting on more cobalt than the rest of the planet combined,” he added. 

Men work in a gold mine in Chudja, north eastern Congo -- one of the area in which so-called "conflict minerals" are mined.

Men work in a gold mine in Chudja, north eastern Congo — one of the area in which so-called “conflict minerals” are mined.
(AFP Photo / Lionel Healing)

As a result, the Congo, a country of roughly 90 million people, became the center of a geopolitical conflict over valuable minerals. “Before anyone knew what was happening, [the] Chinese government [and] Chinese mining companies took control of almost all the big mines and the local population has been displaced.” The Congolese are “under duress,” Kara said. 

He continued: “They dig in absolutely subhuman, gut-wrenching conditions for a dollar a day, feeding cobalt up the supply chain into all the phones, all the tablets, and especially electric cars.” 

British rapper Zuby recommended that his nearly one million followers watch the interview. 

“This latest Joe Rogan Experience podcast is heavy,” he wrote. “If you have a smartphone or electric vehicle (that’s 100% of you) then I strongly recommend listening to it.”

Some, if not all, of the famous tech and energy companies in the world are implicated in the humanitarian crisis, Kara said. 

“This is the bottom of the supply chain of your iPhone, of your Tesla, of your Samsung.” 

Fox News’ Thomas Catenacci contributed to this report. 

Jeffrey Clark is an associate editor for Fox News Digital. He has previously served as a speechwriter for a cabinet secretary and a Fulbright teacher in South Korea. Jeffrey graduated from the University of Iowa in 2019 with a degree in English and History. 

Story tips can be sent to [email protected]

Total
0
Shares
Share 0
Tweet 0
Pin it 0
You May Also Like
Read More
  • News

Why Thomas Edison should be considered the patron saint of homeschooling

  • admin
  • March 21, 2023
Read More
  • News

UCF professor fired for rejecting notion of systemic racism speaks out: ‘Diversity is pretty much anti-White’

  • admin
  • March 21, 2023
Read More
  • News

Josh Hawley says ‘accountability’ is next after Biden signs COVID declassification bill

  • admin
  • March 21, 2023
Read More
  • News

Kansas man stumbles on human skeleton while searching for deer antlers

  • admin
  • March 21, 2023
Read More
  • News

Los Angeles schools prepare for 3-day strike for ‘equitable’ wage increases and more

  • admin
  • March 20, 2023
Read More
  • News

Nashville police searching for suspects who spray-painted swastikas and ‘hate messages’ on homes: video

  • admin
  • March 20, 2023
Read More
  • News

Scalise rails against Biden’s ‘war on American energy’ with new bill aimed at lowering costs for families

  • admin
  • March 20, 2023
Read More
  • News

Manhattan DA Bragg decries Trump’s attempt to ‘intimidate’ his office in private memo

  • admin
  • March 20, 2023

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Featured Posts
  • 1
    To Curb Burnout, Design Jobs to Better Match Employees’ Needs
    • March 21, 2023
  • 2
    Why Thomas Edison should be considered the patron saint of homeschooling
    • March 21, 2023
  • 3
    Understanding Customer Experience
    • March 21, 2023
  • 4
    London police force should be overhauled or broken up, says review
    • March 21, 2023
  • 5
    Keeping Your Confidence Up During a Lengthy Job Search
    • March 21, 2023
Recent Posts
  • 5 Strategies to Empower Employees to Make Decisions
    • March 21, 2023
  • Silicon Valley Bank’s Focus on Startups Was a Double-Edged Sword
    • March 21, 2023
  • It’s a New Era for Mental Health at Work
    • March 21, 2023

Sign Up for Our Newsletters

Subscribe now to our newsletter

American Talk
  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact

Input your search keywords and press Enter.