How overexploitation of sand is threatening ecosystems and livelihoods

Found on beaches, in rivers, across deserts and on the seabed, sand has long been seen as abundant and virtually inexhaustible. But it has become the world's s…

Found on beaches, in rivers, across deserts and on the seabed, sand has long been seen as abundant and virtually inexhaustible. But it has become the world's s…

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How overexploitation of sand is threatening ecosystems and livelihoods Found on beaches, in rivers, across deserts and on the seabed, sand has long been seen as abundant and virtually inexhaustible. But it has become the world's second most exploited natural resource after water, and scientists warn rising demand will cause "enormous environmental damage". According to the collected source material from www.rfi.fr, Found on beaches, in rivers, across deserts and on the seabed, sand has long been seen as abundant and virtually inexhaustible. But it has become the world's second most exploited natural resource after water, and scientists warn rising demand will cause "enormous environmental damage". Editorial classification signals include category: cronaca ; source timestamp: 2026-06-07T09:11:48+00:00. This draft is a structured rewrite of the feed material and does not add unsupported…

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Confidenza: 82/100

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Categoria: cronaca