Why the Desert Is Importing Sand
When the Planet Runs Out of the Right Kind of Dirt: A Global Crisis Hiding in Plain Sight Beneath the shimmering dunes of Saudi Arabia and the UAE, where sand stretches endlessly under the desert sun, a quiet paradox unfolds: these nations, blessed with vast sandy landscapes, must import millions of tonnes of construction-grade material from distant shores like Australia and China. The grains they possess—smoothed by centuries of relentless wind—are useless for modern concrete. They lack the sharp, angular edges needed to bind with cement and create structures strong enough to support skyscrapers, bridges, and entire new cities. This counterintuitive trade is merely the visible tip of a global sand crisis that has quietly escalated into one of the 21st century’s most nuanced resource challenges. As humanity pours concrete at an unprecedented rate—extracting 40–50 billion tonnes of sand and aggregates annually, enough to build a nine-storey wall around the equator every year—usabl...