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Deposited millions of years ago, borates are crystallised salts that contain boron.
Boron is a mineral essential to plant growth, so it is used in fertilisers, but it is also used in high tech applications, such as the heat-resistant glass for smartphones, materials for renewable energy – like wind, solar and EV batteries, wood protection and fiberglass insulation.
Commercially viable quantities of this rare and versatile mineral have been found in very few places in the world. One is in California’s Mojave Desert, where we started mining more than 150 years ago first in Death Valley and then moving, in 1927, to Boron.
Today our Boron operations in California, supply approximately 30% of global demand for refined borates, from one of the world’s 2 largest borate deposits.
The mule teams that hauled borates out of our original mines in Death Valley are long gone, but the symbol endures in the 20 Mule Team® Borax brand – a symbol of high quality and consistency, supply reliability, technical support and service.
Borates have a variety of industrial uses. For example, boron is a micronutrient essential to plant growth. The boron we mine is a low calcium, sodium borate, which is optimal for agricultural use. We refine our borate minerals into boron-rich micronutrient fertilisers that help farmers, around the world, grow better crops in greater quantities.
Some of the many uses of boron include: glass, fibreglass, flame-retardants, ceramics, industrial detergents, wood protection, pesticides, fertilisers, and batteries and capacitors.
Trace amounts are found in soil, water, plants and animals. The element boron does not exist by itself in nature. It combines with oxygen and other elements to form salts called borates.
It is the fifth element in the periodic table.
Arabian gold and silversmiths used them. It is thought that ancient Babylonian goldsmiths could have used borates as far back as 2,000 BCE.
They help purify aluminium by binding impurities that make it easier to skim them off. They also allow metals to melt at a lower temperature that conserves process energy.
This is the largest single use for the mineral worldwide.
They can be found in the durable, heat-resistant glass in smartphones, tablets and other electronic displays; improving the performance of EV batteries, and in the helping the durability of solar energy panels and wind turbines.
Boron’s special atomic structure is critical to safeguard against rare, out-of-control reactions in nuclear power plants.
Boron is present everywhere in the environment but substantial deposits of borates are relatively rare. In fact, ores that contain boron are among the rarest minerals on Earth.
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