Kat Gale’s Reviews > Cobalt Red: How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives > Status Update

Kat Gale
Kat Gale is on page 58 of 290
Women were always paid less than men for the same sack of cobalt.
Dec 31, 2025 08:21AM
Cobalt Red: How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives

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Kat’s Previous Updates

Kat Gale
Kat Gale is on page 64 of 290
The Chinese pay billions to the government, and the politicians close their eyes. Organizations like IDAK [Sustainable Investment in Katanga] and other civil society organizations are allowed to exist only to show they exist.
Jan 02, 2026 11:08AM
Cobalt Red: How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives


Kat Gale
Kat Gale is on page 63 of 290
Before getting a concession, the mining companies must submit a plan on waste management to the government. Of course, they do not adhere to their plans. But the government is not sending people to monitor their activities either.
Jan 02, 2026 07:32AM
Cobalt Red: How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives


Kat Gale
Kat Gale is on page 62 of 290
The mining companies do not control the runoff of effluents from their processing operations. They do not clean up when they have chemical spills. Toxic dust and gases from mining plants and diesel equipment spreads for many kilometers and are inhaled by the local population. The mining companies have polluted the entire region. All the crops, animals, and fish stocks are contaminated.
Jan 01, 2026 01:10PM
Cobalt Red: How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives


Kat Gale
Kat Gale is on page 61 of 290
Samples of dust taken inside homes in the Copper Belt had an average of 170mg lead...the EPA recommends a max safe limit of 40mg inside homes. Levels as high as 170mg can cause neurological damage, muscle and joint pain, headaches, gastrointestinal ailments, and reduced fertility in adults. In children, lead poisoning can cause irreversible developmental damage as well as weight loss, vomiting, and seizures.
Jan 01, 2026 08:45AM
Cobalt Red: How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives


Kat Gale
Kat Gale is on page 59 of 290
The devastated landscape resembled a battlefield after an aerial bombardment. The survivors of the day’s assault clambered out of the craters to catch what little rest they could before enduring the ordeal all over again the next day. Beyond the horizon, beyond all reason and morality, people from another world awoke and checked their smartphones. None of the artisanal miners I met in Kipushi had ever even seen one.
Dec 31, 2025 11:41AM
Cobalt Red: How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives


Kat Gale
Kat Gale is on page 58 of 290
Sexual assault was a scourge in almost every artisanal mining area I visited. The women and girls who suffered these attacks represented the invisible, brutalized backbone of the global cobalt supply chain. No one at the top of the chain even bothered making press statements about zero-tolerance policies on sexual assault against the women and girls who scrounged for their cobalt.
Dec 30, 2025 01:07PM
Cobalt Red: How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives


Kat Gale
Kat Gale is on page 58 of 290
Ore transportation fees seemed little more than a money grab by the government...The fees made it impossible for most artisanal miners to access markets directly due to their inability to pay the tax. Being cut off from the marketplace forced them to accept submarket prices from négociants for their hard labor, further reinforcing the state of poverty that pushed them into artisanal mining to begin with.
Dec 30, 2025 09:00AM
Cobalt Red: How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives


Kat Gale
Kat Gale is on page 53 of 290
Cobalt is toxic to touch and breathe, but that is not the biggest worry that the artisanal miners have. The ore often contains traces of radioactive uranium.
Dec 29, 2025 01:07PM
Cobalt Red: How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives


Kat Gale
Kat Gale is on page 48 of 290
The road from Lumbubashi to Kipushi is the primary route of export for cobalt & other minerals from the DRC. The road was in good condition until 1997 when Kabila and his Rwanda-Uganda-backed army invaded& shelled the road. In 2010, a Chinese consortium repaved the road as part of an agreement brokered by Kabila, through which China managed to corner most of the global cobalt market before anyone knew what happened.
Dec 28, 2025 07:34PM
Cobalt Red: How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives


Kat Gale
Kat Gale is on page 45 of 290
"All the mining companies treat the Congolese people like slaves,” Gloria said. “They think because our people are poor, they can be humiliated.”
“All Africans are poor in their eyes. They steal our resources to keep us poor!” Joseph exclaimed.
“When you see what the mining companies have done to our forests and rivers, your heart will cry,” Reine added.
Dec 28, 2025 09:45AM
Cobalt Red: How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives


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