Present Status Of Offshore Phosphate Deposits, Atlantic Continental Margin

- Organization:
- International Marine Minerals Society
- Pages:
- 2
- File Size:
- 85 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1988
Abstract
Phosphate deposits on the southeastern U.S. coastal plain have long been the major force in world phosphate markets. World markets continue to grow, but the role of U.S. resources is rapidly declining. This situation results from a complex interaction of economic, political, and environmental factors. Causes for this ongoing erosion of the U. S. market include 1) escalating costs, 2) changes in land-use patterns, 3) environmental pressures oh conventional mining techniques; 4) exhaustion of shallow, high-grade resources in Florida, and 5) increased, low-cost production in other countries throughout the world. In fact, some agencies and commodity personnel predict that the U.S. will become a net phosphate importer early in the next century. If this projection is correct, the U.S. industry must look towards major changes in the near future in order to continue to compete in the world market. One possible change includes development and application of unconventional mining techniques to cheaply recover vast 'new' potential resources in areas with lower land-use pressures. These 'new' resources include 1) deep phosphorites within major sediment basins of the southeastern coastal plain and 2) subsurface phosphorites on the continental shelf and within the U.S. EEZ. These latter resources include extensive deposits in Onslow Bay, N.C.; broad regions offshore of Savannah, Ga. and Cape Canaveral, Fla.; and the central portion of the west Florida shelf. Little research and exploration has been
Citation
APA:
(1988) Present Status Of Offshore Phosphate Deposits, Atlantic Continental MarginMLA: Present Status Of Offshore Phosphate Deposits, Atlantic Continental Margin. International Marine Minerals Society, 1988.