π Natural resources are valuable raw materials used in manufacturing and production worldwide.
π° Australia is a leading country in mining, earning trillions of dollars annually from resources like gold and uranium.
βοΈ The Democratic Republic of Congo is rich in natural resources like diamonds, copper, and cobalt.
π The Democratic Republic of the Congo has significant mineral deposits, including the largest coltan reserve in the world, and is known for its reserves of gold, tin, tantalum, diamond, copper, and cobalt.
π° Venezuela is a major exporter of bauxite, coal, gold, iron ore, and oil, with extensive reserves. It has the third-largest coal production and the eighth-largest reserves of natural gas globally.
β‘ The Democratic Republic of the Congo has over a million tons of lithium, and Venezuela accounts for 2.7 percent of the global supply of natural gas.
πΊπΈ The United States is a leading producer of coal and has significant reserves of coal, timber, copper, gold, oil, and natural gas.
π§π· Brazil has commodities worth trillions of dollars, including gold, iron, oil, uranium, and bauxite.
π³ Timber is the most valuable natural resource, accounting for over 12.3% of the world's timber supplies.
π° Russia has the biggest mining industry and estimated natural resources worth $75 trillion. They are a leading producer of various minerals and metals.
βοΈ India's mining sector contributes 11% of the country's industrial GDP and 2.5% of total GDP. They have significant coal reserves and other resources like diamonds and natural gas.
π India has a significant production of thorium and mica.
π° Canada is third on the list and has numerous valuable natural resources including oil, minerals, and timber.
π Saudi Arabia is second on the list and has 20% of the world's oil reserves.
π Saudi Arabia has the sixth largest natural gas reserves with $34.4 trillion worth of resources.
π¨π³ China is the country with the most natural resources, estimated to be worth $23 trillion.
βοΈ China relies on mining contracts in other countries due to lack of local reserves.