SALT
PRODUCERS
European Producers
|| Production Data
The
salt industry
Every day, each of the earth's 5.9 billion inhabitants uses salt.
Annual salt production has increased over the past century from
10 million tons to over 200 million tons today. Nearly 100 nations
have salt producing facilities ranging from primitive solar evaporation
to advanced, multi-stage evaporation in salt refineries.
Humans need salt to live. Prehistoric man obtained salt from
the meat of hunted animals. When man developed agriculture,
salt was added to supplement the vegetable and cereal diet and
the quest for salt became a primary motivation in history.
In the mid-1800s, salt's value as an important raw material
for the chemical industry was established when the Solvay process
in Belgium converted salt to synthetic soda ash. Salt is, today,
the largest mineral
feedstock consumed by the world chemical industry. A summary
of a 1997 book, The
Economics of Salt, is available online.
North
America produces more than one-quarter of the world's salt.
The U.S. salt industry began in 1614 when the first non-native
solar saltworks was established by the Jamestown colonists on
Smith's Island, VA. The U.S. is the world's largest salt producer,
producing 41.3 million tons a year, nearly half of that, 21.1
million tonnes, in the form of brines produced by captive brine
wells supplying U.S. chloralkali chemical companies. The remaining
20 million tons is "dry
salt" produced using three basic
technologies: solar
evaporation of seawater or saline lakewater, solution
mining and vacuum
pan evaporation and conventional deep-shaft
(rock salt) mining. Some other countries like Bolivia
and Mali,
use "low-tech" solutions such as simply scraping salt from the
surface of anciently-evaporated salt lakes. Currently, the U.S.
salt industry operates 48 salt production plants with major
production sites in Louisiana,
Ohio,
New
York, Kansas,
Michigan,
Utah
and California.
All major U.S. salt producers are members
of the Salt Institute. U.S. salt production is also tracked
by the U.S.
Geological Survey, including an interesting review of saltmaking
at the Great Salt Lake in Utah.
The
Canadian salt industry produces 13.32 million metric tonnes
from major rock salt mines in Ontario, Quebec and New Brunswick
and vacuum pan refineries in Alberta, Saskatechewan, Ontario,
New Brunswick and Nova Scotia; nearly three-fourths was rock
salt which is used primarily for highway deicing.
Mexican salt production totalled 8.412 million tonnes, most
of it from the world's largest solar facility in Guerrero
Negro in Baja California.
World salt production totalled 186 million tons in 1998
U.S. 41.3 million tonnes
China
30.8 million tonnes
Germany 15.7 million tonnes
Canada
13.3 million tonnes
India
9.5 million tonnes
Australia 8.9 million tonnes
Mexico
8.4 million tonnes
France 7.0
million tonnes
United Kingdom
6.6 million tonnes
Brazil 6.5 million tonnes
Netherlands 5.5 million tonnes
Europe is a major salt producer. European salt manufacturers
are members of the European
Salt Producers Association.
Salt production in such places as Austria,
Poland
and Thailand
is a well-promoted tourist
attraction. Salt production in Jordan
is described online. Some areas of the world have a natural
disadvantge having no underground salt deposits and a climate
unsuitable to solar salt production. The Salt
Industry Center of Japan and the Science
Research Foundation both have more information about salt
and the salt industry in Japan (in Japanese).
Source: http://www.saltinstitute.org/3.html
