Barbra Streisand Shares Challenges With Cannes On Making βYentlβ In Video Message For Honorary Palme: βI Had To Make This Movieβ



Sand is the most exploited solid natural resource on Earth. It has been integrated into how we build homes, roads, buildings, and bridges as well as how we protect coastal infrastructure from rising seas. Sand underpins nearly every aspect of modern infrastructure and economics, plays crucial roles in supporting ecosystem biodiversity, and literally shores up rivers and coasts.
A new report from the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) found that we are using 50 billion metric tons (50 trillion kilograms) of sand per year. As global development and industrialization expand, demand for sand in the building sector is expected to rise 45% by the year 2060, outpacing current efforts to sustainably harvest it. The reportβs authors urge countries to establish sand as a strategic national asset and develop policies for sustainable extraction.
βSand is sometimes referred as the unrecognized hero of development, but its essential role in sustaining the natural services on which we depend is even more overlooked,β Pascal Peduzzi, director of the UNEP Global Resource Information Database Geneva, said in a press release about the report. βSand is our first line of defence against sea level rise, storm surges, and salination of coastal aquifersβall hazards exacerbated by climate change.β
Dead sand, or sand that has been extracted from its natural environment, is a key component in building materials like concrete and asphalt. Communities around the world use sand in water filtration systems, providing clean water for drinking and agricultural use. And although a transition to clean energy sources is necessary to curb the effects of climate change, many of those sources also depend on sand: solar panels require glass made from high-purity silica sand, and wind turbines, hydroelectric dams, and nuclear power plants all require concrete.

Sand also plays a critical role in natural ecosystems. It is home to a wide array of critters from crabs, sharks, and turtles to microorganisms like bacteria and fungi. It supports the growth of corals, mangroves, and seagrasses that in turn support even more marine creatures. It is a key component of healthy soil and aids in surface drainage. It guides river evolution and acts as flood buffer and storm barrier. It also provides local economic benefits via tourism.
These are among the values of sand when it is left alone and unused, called βaliveβ sand. The UN report notes that these benefits are typically of greater value over time than if sand is dredged and used. But because these benefits are hard to see, they are often overlooked when nations calculate the value of their sand resources.
Despite sandβs importance whether dead or alive, the report notes that few countries have established sand as a strategic national asset or have developed strategies for sustainable extraction. At the current pace, humans are extracting sand from the natural environment at a faster pace than it is being replenished by geologic processes.
β’Β Β Read the Report: Sand and Sustainability: An Essential Resource for Nature and Development
β’Β Β Track Global Sand Dredging: Marine Sand Watch
β’Β Β Dig Into the Details: Grains of Sand: Too Much and Never Enough
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Whatβs more, the UNEPβs Marine Sand Watch tool shows that about half of sand dredging companies are operating within marine protected areas, accounting for about 15% of the volume of dredged sand. This practice, the report notes, is potentially trading in sandβs long-term benefits for short-term gains.
The UN report recommends a few actions to protect the long-term availability of sand as a natural resource, including:
βOver-reliance on short-term economic metrics risks obscuring, and further impacting, the geological and ecological processes that take centuries to form and may not be restored once critical thresholds are crossed,β the report states. βWhat is hardest to measure may be precisely what sustains both nature and human societies over the long term. The challenge ahead is not only to manage extraction, but to recognise and balance the full spectrum of sandβs values.β
βKimberly M. S. Cartier (@astrokimcartier.bsky.social), Staff Writer
