The Copper You Need Is Stuck In A 30-Mile Traffic Jam
Big Take4 Nov 2022

The Copper You Need Is Stuck In A 30-Mile Traffic Jam

Here’s a random yet important fact: Copper is one of the very best conductors of electricity of all metals. And that matters, because as we move toward a world in which more and more things in our lives plug in or charge up–not just your phone, but electric vehicles, solar panels and wind turbines that will power the future–copper is in increasingly high demand. Worldwide, about 21 million metric tons of it are hauled up from the ground each year. And demand will soon double.

Some of the richest reserves of copper are found in Southern Africa. But getting it from deep underground and trucking it thousands of miles to buyers can be a harrowing journey.

Without more production or new mines, the world could be looking at shortages, and soaring prices for copper and the products that use it. Joining this episode are Santiago-based commodities reporter James Attwood, and Yvonne Yue Li, a metals and mining reporter in New York. They’ll explain what a coming copper shortage could mean for us all.

Reporter Matthew Hill also stops by to describe his visit to a huge mine in Zambia, where he descended thousands of feet underground to see copper being blasted from the rock–and talked to the truckers who risk their safety bringing it to port.

Learn more about this story here: https://bloom.bg/3fxYXrQ

Listen to The Big Take podcast every weekday and subscribe to our daily newsletter: https://bloom.bg/3F3EJAK

Have questions or comments for Wes and the team? Reach us at bigtake@bloomberg.net.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Avsnitt(778)

The US Middle Class Is Doing Fine. Why Are They So Worried?

The US Middle Class Is Doing Fine. Why Are They So Worried?

Hello and welcome to The Big Take Podcast! Today: The good news, and not so good news, about the US middle class. With inflation rising, the stock market ping-ponging and housing prices softening, that broad swath of Americans who form the backbone of the US economy are getting hit on all sides. Bloomberg reporters Shawn Donnan, Alex Tanzi, Claire Ballentine and Airielle Lowe teamed up to take a look at how middle-income Americans are doing. The answer: Not so badly, actually–at least on paper. Even so, they’re worried about what’s next for them. And they have good reason to be. Shawn sits down with Wes to share the results from their exclusive polling and what these precarious economic times mean for the fortunes of working Americans. Learn more about this story here: https://bloom.bg/3faCxwM Listen to The Big Take podcast every weekday and subscribe to our daily newsletter: https://bloom.bg/3F3EJAK  Have questions or comments for Wes and the team? Reach us at bigtake@bloomberg.net.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

27 Okt 202229min

Introducing: The Big Take

Introducing: The Big Take

Each weekday, The Big Take brings you one story—one big, important story that impacts your life. Host Wes Kosova talks to Bloomberg journalists around the world, experts in their fields and the people at the center of the news to help you understand what’s happening, what it means and why it matters. Money, politics, the economy and business, energy, the environment, technology—we cover it all on The Big Take. And we do it in plain English. The Big Take features the best of Bloomberg's in-depth, original reporting from around the globe. Listen each weekday starting on Oct. 27. Learn more about The Big Take www.bloomberg.com/bigtake and subscribe to our daily newsletter https://bloom.bg/3rBmR9g.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

19 Okt 20222min

Populärt inom Politik & nyheter

svenska-fall
motiv
aftonbladet-krim
p3-krim
fordomspodden
flashback-forever
rss-viva-fotboll
rss-krimstad
aftonbladet-daily
rss-sanning-konsekvens
spar
blenda-2
rss-vad-fan-hande
rss-krimreportrarna
rss-frandfors-horna
dagens-eko
olyckan-inifran
krimmagasinet
rss-expressen-dok
svd-nyhetsartiklar