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The utilization of Asia’s natural resources has depended, to a large extent, not only on the development of technology but also on political circumstances. Thus, until the end of World War II and the beginning of the process of decolonization in Asia, most Asian countries were not free to develop their own natural resources independently and without reference to the economic interest of a colonial power. Cultural attitudes also have affected the utilization of resources. In India cultural taboos prohibit the slaughter of cattle either for food or to conserve resources when the animals are no longer productive.
The value of natural resources also varies with the prevailing technology. For example, by applying new technology to the production of cereals, the same area of land can give greatly increased yields. Modern technology has enabled improvements in many other areas—e.g., in Japanese production of silk or cultured pearls. Technology also may make it possible to exploit mineral wealth that previously was unusable because it was inaccessible or juxtaposed with other minerals.
Mining
Asia extracts an immense wealth of minerals, of which its mineral fuels—coal, petroleum, and natural gas—are of greatest value. The largest Asian coal producers are China and Russia (Siberia), followed by India, Kazakhstan, North Korea, South Korea, and Japan. Considerably smaller quantities of coal are mined in a number of other countries. The Arab countries of Southwest Asia collectively are the principal producers of petroleum in the world. The major Middle Eastern mines are in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Iran, Kuwait, Oman, and Iraq. Russian Siberia is also a major petroleum producer, as are China, Indonesia, and Malaysia. The biggest supplier of natural gas is Siberia, and the Central Asian republics, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, and Iran are also important.
The largest producers of iron ore and ores for ferroalloys are China, Siberia, India, Iran, Kazakhstan, and North Korea. Together these six account for almost all of the ore mined on the continent. India and China are among the major world producers of manganese ore and between them account for virtually all of Asia’s output. Asia’s biggest producer of chromite is Kazakhstan, followed by Turkey, India, and Iran. Some tungsten is mined in China, Central Asia, North and South Korea, Thailand, and Myanmar. Nickel is extracted in Indonesia, Siberia, China, and the Philippines. Central Asia has become an increasingly important producer of many of the ferroalloys.
Asia is one of the world’s main producers of tin-in-concentrates (i.e., tin ore that has been partially processed to increase the proportion of tin in it), providing more than half of the world’s total output. The most important Asian tin producers are China, Indonesia, and Malaysia. There is also considerable production of copper ore in Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, the Philippines, China, and Indonesia.
The bauxite produced in Asia represents only a small part of total world production, and China, India, Siberia, and Kazakhstan are the most important Asian producers. China and Siberia are among the world’s leading producers of gold, and Uzbekistan and the Philippines are also important. Asia accounts for more than half of the world’s output of graphite, mostly from China and South Korea.
Timber, fisheries, and animal husbandry
Logs are exported from China, Siberia, Malaysia, Indonesia, and Myanmar to industrialized and timber-deficient countries, especially Japan. Thailand and Myanmar produce special varieties of timber such as teak. Thai teak is also exported to other parts of the world. Malaysia and Indonesia are among the world’s leading producers of commercial hardwoods. Although output from Philippine forests has been reduced, valuable hardwoods and the soft “Philippine mahogany” are still produced.
Wood in the enormous forestland of Siberia ranges from pine around the Bratsk area to a mixture of pine, larch, aspen, birch, and other species in the region south of Lake Baikal. Logging and transport operations are highly mechanized and have been facilitated by a road-building program.
Bamboos are an important component of wet-evergreen, moist-deciduous, and dry-deciduous forests in the tropical parts of Southeast Asia. At higher elevations and in temperate climates of Asia—as in Bhutan, China, Japan, and Nepal—many of the genera found in tropical parts are represented by different species, and other genera are common in China and Japan. Pure bamboo forests are common on slopes where temporary cultivation has been practiced in Myanmar, Bangladesh, and other areas.
The exploitation of Asian fisheries increased during the late 20th century. Japan has created a well-organized fishing fleet that can go nearly anywhere in search of catches, although it has been accused of environmental insensitivity, because the techniques used to catch tuna have also killed many dolphins and turtles. Freezing and canning fish products have allowed international trade to increase dramatically. In some countries freshwater fish are an important component of the diet of the local people; raising fish in culturally controlled ponds is significant in southern China, Indonesia, and the Philippines. Fish from big delta regions such as the Ganges in Bangladesh provide local populations with a valuable source of protein. Overall, China catches the world’s greatest tonnage; however, Thailand has become one of the world’s most important fish exporters, largely because of its shrimp and prawn farming.
Raising sheep and goats for meat and wool is especially important in China, India, Pakistan, and Iran; these animals also are raised in nearly all the other countries of Asia, although the sheep population of Southeast Asia is small. Seminomadic pastoralism is practiced on the steppelands of Central Asia, as it is in parts of Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran, and Saudi Arabia. Angora goats are herded in Anatolian Turkey to provide the silky mohair for which they are noted. Silkworms are raised for their silk in China, Japan, India, and the Central Asian republics.
While dairying is important in a few areas such as India, Pakistan, Central Asia, and Turkey, there is little large-scale beef-cattle farming; the Central Asian republics, however, have attempted to develop such patterns. Both China and Japan have discarded their traditional avoidance of milk products, and both countries have growing urban dairy industries. China, the world’s largest producer of pork, is the principal producer in Asia, with Japan a distant second. The poultry industry has made rapid strides, and the production of both eggs and broiling chickens has gathered much momentum. Feed availability for poultry is one of the major factors limiting the sector’s growth and development. Straw, obtained from rice crops, is the primary fodder for livestock in southern Asia, with cattle feed usually supplemented by concentrates such as oil cake.
In spite of the large number of cattle and sheep in the region, the production of hides and skins is only slowly reaching internationally significant levels. For many tanneries the quality of flaying and curing has to be improved.