Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • In some ways, I think it's quite disappointing

  • seeing these bars because the gold is an exciting element

  • it has interesting chemistry

  • and it's just sitting here doing nothing.

  • It's enormously impressive, but it's a bit sad

  • rather like a mausoleum where the

  • the dead gold is sitting, waiting for people to remember it.

  • It could be doing exciting reactions and so on.

  • We're in the vault, the bullion vault at the Bank of England.

  • I've never seen so much gold.

  • In fact I've never seen so much of any element.

  • So we're standing here and each shelf here has got a tonne of gold.

  • which is worth 35 million pounds at today's price.

  • Tomorrow it might be worth even more.

  • It's very secure; we've been through a whole series of security checks.

  • No money's allowed here, to make sure we don't take anything out.

  • And so

  • we're both really excited to be here

  • so the camera may be shaking with Brady's excitement.

  • I've never seen large lumps of gold

  • and to see it all 'round is extraordinary.

  • One's first reaction is that it can't possibly be real

  • because normally you don't see such things.

  • Looks like chocolates in the duty free at the airport

  • or something like that.

  • But these really are solid gold bars

  • and it's quite extraordinary.

  • There isn't any smell because metals don't smell

  • and it's very quiet because of the thick walls

  • to keep it secure.

  • The weather's been very cold recently

  • and I was ready to be shivering but it's nice and warm.

  • But I suppose gold colour also gives you a feeling of warmth

  • so it may be partly psychological.

  • The reason why the bank has got this store

  • is because not only the Bank of England but other central banks

  • like to keep some of their money reserves in gold

  • because the price of gold is very stable

  • or the value of gold compared to the value of currencies

  • which can go up and down.

  • And so, every country has a certain proportion of its reserves in gold

  • and if you look at the statistics, the UK at the moment has about 310 tonnes of gold in its reserves

  • But there's much more gold here than that

  • because it belongs to all sorts of people, not just to the Bank of England

  • This vault is part of a complex of different rooms.

  • I haven't seen the other rooms

  • but altogether if you look at the bank's annual report

  • it's worth 197 billion pounds.

  • That is 197 thousand million pounds.

  • And that's quite the serious sum of money.

  • They, people buy and sell the gold

  • and each block of gold has its own number

  • like your car has a registration number.

  • And when people buy and trade the gold

  • they don't actually take the bar home

  • but just that number is transferred from the seller's account to the buyer's account

  • and the gold just sits here quietly.

  • Apparently the oldest bar of gold here has been here since 1916.

  • That's the First World War, nearly 100 years ago.

  • But the beauty of gold a chemical element

  • is that it's very unreactive

  • So it looks just the same now as it did in 1916.

  • It's hasn't tarnished.

  • It hasn't got oxide layers on the surface.

  • It's hasn't started creeping, changing its shape and so on.

  • So come over here because they've given me two bars that we can look at.

  • So we've got two different bars of gold

  • which are both the so-called 'London Good Delivery' bars

  • which means that their weight is in a certain limit range.

  • And in fact each of them has its precise weight put on them

  • in a rather strange unit called a Troy ounce

  • So this one is 399.100

  • This one was made in Australia.

  • And this one apparently came from Switzerland and is slightly heavier: 400.075

  • I must say this one looks much nicer.

  • It's polished more and

  • this one looks a bit like a loaf of bread

  • but is a rather miserable loaf of bread.

  • but a pretty fantastic lump of gold.

  • Now one of the things you know about gold is that it's really heavy

  • so I'm going to see whether I can actually lift this with one hand.

  • And I can sort of lift it

  • but not easily.

  • Two hands is quite easy.

  • So this weighs, each of these in more understandable units, weighs

  • something like 12.4 kilos or 28 pounds.

  • So for those of you who use imperial units, that's two stone

  • Each of these is worth about 435 thousand pounds.

  • You could buy two quite nice houses for a block like this.

  • Or for a whole shelf of these, which contains a tonne

  • you could buy 137 of the upmarket Rolls Royce cars

  • so take your choice.

  • These blocks are a bit like bricks

  • and if you took all the gold that had ever been mined

  • and put them together like a construction kit to make a big block

  • you would end up with a block that was 20 metres cubed.

  • That's 60 feet on each side.

  • Which would easily fit, for example, under the legs of the Eiffel Tower.

  • It woudln't look all that big

  • just as a building on the street.

  • And that's all the gold there ever has been.

  • I did a little calculation on the way here

  • that I weigh about the same as six of these bars of gold

  • which means that if I were worth my weight in gold

  • I'd be worth a bit over two and a half million pounds.

  • I was a bit disappointed.

  • Thought I might be worth more, but still...

  • So not only would all the gold ever mined fit here under the legs of the Eiffel Tower

  • it'd fit here quite easily.

  • By my reckoning that cube of about 20 metres in each direction

  • would probably fit three times from there

  • to over there.

  • Same for each side.

  • And you could probably stack it on top a few times as well.

  • So not that much gold.

  • Now we actually filmed a bit more in the vault we haven't used.

  • So stay tuned, we might use that soon.

  • In the meantime we've made plenty of other films about gold.

  • We've evaporated it,

  • we've dissolved it.

  • You can check them out also.

In some ways, I think it's quite disappointing

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it