North Korea sitting on $7 trillion worth of minerals

Authored by 9news.com.au and submitted by dragun667

The value of North Korea's untapped minerals would be enough to pay every one of Earth's seven billion people more than $1000.

Scratching the surface of the secluded nation reveals vast deposits of more than 200 minerals including magnesite, zinc, copper, limestone, molybdenum, iron and gold worth more than $7 trillion, Quartz reports.

Despite the vast swathes of riches buried beneath the nation's bedrock, taking advantage of them has become difficult.

A lack of mining equipment and machinery has made it almost impossible for North Korea to extract some of the rarer minerals and sanctions have made it illegal for some private enterprises to establish drilling sites in the country.

Despite the limitation, it has not stopped the country from extracting some of its vast supply of minerals with mining reportedly making up 14 percent of the economy.

Once the minerals are out of the ground North Korea still has to offload them to potential buyers which are another hurdle.

The UN began imposing sanctions on North Korea after its first nuclear test in 2006 which has been tightened over the years.

In March 2016 North Korea was banned from exporting gold, vanadium, titanium and in November that year, the ban was extended to cover nickel, copper, zinc, and silver while also capping its coal exports.

On August 11, 2016, a North Korean ship was intercepted by Egyptian authorities bound for the Suez Canal. On-board they who found 30,000 rocket grenades buried beneath more than two million kilograms of iron ore.

Stahl_Scharnhorst on July 2nd, 2017 at 03:44 UTC »

I'm currently sitting on all the worlds resources. I just can't access due to lack of technology, equipment, funds and manpower. Should send some cease and desist letters out though. Cause I call dibs.

x-ok on July 2nd, 2017 at 02:46 UTC »

I was at a closed copper mine in BC Canada that had been turned into an interesting mining museum. The guide was asked about the ore remaining. He said (paraphrasing), "Right now there are 6 billion dollars worth of ore remaining under where we stand. Unfortunately , it would cost 7 billion dollars to get it out. That's why it's just a museum for curious tourists right now." Mining and not mining is a fine line. Hence, many (possibly temporary) ghost towns exist and so forth.

Kindofsickofyou on July 2nd, 2017 at 00:14 UTC »

South Korea should tunnel under and grab it.