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Australia has many types of natural assets. Subsoil assets are of major economic significance and are discussed here. Air, water, soil, and biodiversity resources are discussed in other sections.
The growth of a nation's stock of subsoil assets broadly depends on the relative pace of two offsetting influences – discoveries which increase the stock, and extractions which reduce it. The former significantly outstripped the latter during the 1990s, as was the case for most of the 20th century.
In recent years, there has been continued growth in Australia's known mineral resources, or economically demonstrated resources (EDR). Increases in EDR were due to on-going drilling and evaluation of known deposits resulting in the re-assessment of resources from inferred or sub-economic categories into EDR and the discovery of new deposits or extensions of known deposits (Geoscience Australia 2008).
Sustained increases in prices for most metal and mineral commodities over recent years have allowed companies to re-assess the economic viability of lower grade resources and deposits which previously were considered to be uneconomic. Overall this has contributed to an increase in EDR for many metal and mineral commodities (Geoscience Australia 2008). In other words, without necessarily making new discoveries, large sustained price increases for mineral and resource exports have led to a major increase in the value of existing identified resources. For more information on import and export price changes (i.e. changes to Australia's terms of trade) during the decade to June 2009, see the National income section.
The net present value of Australia's EDR per capita grew on average by around 13.3% a year between June 1999 and June 2009.
In 2007 Australia's economically demonstrated resources of brown coal, mineral sands (rutile and zircon), nickel, uranium, zinc and lead remained the world's largest, while antimony, bauxite, black coal, copper, gold, iron ore, industrial diamond, ilmenite, lithium, manganese ore, niobium, silver and tantalum rank in the top six worldwide (Geoscience Australia 2008).
Among the minerals showing strongest annual growth in net present value per capita of EDR in current-price terms between June 1999 and June 2009 were gold (up 51.2%), iron ore (up 23.6%), copper (up 23.0%) and nickel (up 20.3%).
Economically demonstrated resources(a)(b) per capita - by mineral
Economically demonstrated resources(a)(b) per capita(c)
Footnote(s): (a) Current prices. (b) Minerals and energy, net present value of demonstrated subsoil resources. (c) At 30 June.
Source(s): ABS Australian System of National Accounts, 2008-09 (cat. no. 5204.0); ABS Australian Demographic Statistics (cat. no. 3101.0)