by Leanan » Fri 17 Mar 2006, 11:42:38
An article from the
Wall St. Journal:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A') global boom in the market price for commodities, including steel and aluminum, has sent scrap-metal prices soaring. And that has created a tempting target for criminals world-wide in everyday objects that contain metals -- from light poles along highways to lowly beer kegs.
In the past few months, Belgium's main railway station has lost nearly all of its 800 aluminum luggage carts. German railway operator Deutsche Bahn says metal thieves recently dismantled and carted off three miles of idle rail track outside Weimar. In Beijing, a European commodities analyst noted, some 25,000 manhole covers have gone missing since the start of last year. They were replaced with concrete plugs.
How bad is it getting? Last month, groundskeepers at the Royal Johor Country Club in Malaysia discovered that somebody had taken the aluminum cups from 12 holes on the golf links.
Perhaps coincidentally, the prices for commodities such as metal have gone up in tandem with energy prices.
Sure is going to be interesting, trying to build new solar panels, wind turbines, power plants, etc., when commodities are so scarce and expensive people are stealing your materials as you build...