This is the hidden impact of technology.For decades, David Maisel has photo-graphed places where humans are changingthe environment so dramatically, theimpact can be seen from the sky. In hislatest project, Desolation Desert, theSan Francisco-based visual artist spenttwo weeks in a plane over the Atacamadesert, where our insatiable demand forcopper, lithium and rare-earth metals- to fuel the consumer electronics
and electric vehicle industries – isreshaping a fragile ecosystem. TheAtacama, in northern Chile, is one ofthe driest and least populated places onEarth, but water-intensive extractionis scarring pristine salt flats. Maisel- who still shoots on film – documented
some of the biggest mining sites. Thework isn’t intended to single out anindustry, Maisel says – in fact, weare all complicit: these resourcesenable almost every facet of our lives.“These new photographs show how thesupposedly remote Atacama desert isbecoming part of a planetary fabric ofurbanisation, and at what cost,” he says.Photography: David MaiselThe Salar de Atacama salt flats contain more than a quarter of the
world’s lithium. At this lithium-extraction field north of the town of
San Pedro de Atacama, one of the largest of its type in the world, brine
rich in lithium is pumped from underneath the salt flats into huge,
jewel-like pools, where it is left to evaporate in stages, in the way
that salt has been produced for millennia. The end result is a silvery
powder – lithium carbonate – that can be manufactured into batteries.
The process consumes huge amounts of water in a region that gets less
than 2.5cm of rainfall a year. “It might appear to be this weirdly
beautiful place, but the damage being wrought is significant,” Maisel says.11-19-FTlithium.indd 106 20/08/2019 12:46