The Elements of Power
A Story of War, Technology, and the Dirtiest Supply Chain on Earth
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- Pedido anticipado
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- Se espera: 20 ene 2026
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- USD 13.99
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- Pedido anticipado
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- USD 13.99
Descripción editorial
“A tale of rapacious colonialism, Cold War spy games, dazzling technical innovation, big business rivalry, big power geopolitics . . . Niarchos has produced an unflinching, landmark work on the nature of extractive capitalism.” —Patrick Radden Keefe, New York Times best-selling author of Empire of Pain and Say Nothing
Epic, shocking, and deeply reported, The Elements of Power tells the story of the war for the global supply of battery metals—essential for the decarbonization of our economies—and the terrible, bloody human cost of this badly misunderstood industry
Congo is rich. Swaths of the war-torn African country lack basic infrastructure, and, after many decades of colonial occupation, its people are officially among the poorest in the world. But hidden beneath the soil are vast quantities of cobalt, lithium, copper, tin, tantalum, tungsten, and other treasures. Recently, this veritable periodic table of resources has become extremely valuable because these metals are essential for the global “energy transition”—the plan for wealthy nations to wean themselves off fossil fuels by shifting to sustainable forms of energy, such as solar and wind. The race to electrify the world’s economy has begun, and China has a considerable head start. From Indonesia to South America to Central Africa, Beijing has invested in mines and infrastructure for decades. But the U.S. has begun fighting back with massive investments of its own, as well as sanctions and disruptive tariffs.
In this rush for green energy, the world has become utterly reliant on resources unearthed far away and willfully blind to the terrible political, environmental, and social consequences of their extraction. If the Democratic Republic of the Congo possesses such riches, why are its children routinely descending deep into treacherous mines to dig with the most rudimentary of tools, or in some cases their bare hands? Why are Indonesia’s seas and skies being polluted in a rush for battery metals? Why is the Western Sahara, a source for phosphates, still being treated like a colony? Who must pay the price for progress?
With unparalleled, original reporting, Nicolas Niarchos reveals how the scramble to control these metals and their production is overturning the world order, just as the global race to drill for oil shaped the twentieth century. Exploring the advent of the lithium-ion battery and tracing the supply chain for its production, Niarchos tells the story both of the people driving these tectonic changes and those whose lives are being upended. He reveals the true, devastating consequences of our best intentions and helps us prepare for an uncertain future. If you have ever used a smartphone or driven an electric vehicle, you are implicated.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Journalist Niarchos debuts with an impressive investigation into the global race to acquire the raw materials needed to power electric vehicles, cellphones, laptops, and other devices. These technologies rely on lithium-ion batteries, which are made of metals such as lithium, cobalt, and nickel, as well as materials like graphite, silicone, and phosphate—all of which, Niarchos explains, have become increasingly valuable as wealthy countries seek to wean themselves off fossil fuels and electrify their economies. But this "green transition" has been a pernicious trade-off: "cleaner power at home for pollution and suffering elsewhere," according to Niarchos, who travels to mineral-rich places like the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Indonesia, and the Western Sahara to chronicle the battery supply chain. He reports on the mining economy in southern Congo, where companies send children into perilous mines and offer workers little protective equipment against the lethal materials they encounter, and details how metal refining facilities spew smog over an Indonesian rainforest and leak toxic waste into rivers that locals rely on. Niarchos pairs these devastating accounts with a detailed history of Western colonization and the scientific discoveries that led to the batteries widely used today. Readers won't look at their smartphones the same way again.