Zürcher Nachrichten - Concerns and impatience over mining the world's seabeds

EUR -
AED 3.967942
AFN 77.324316
ALL 99.294066
AMD 422.287408
ANG 1.93397
AOA 990.639478
ARS 1159.010017
AUD 1.71413
AWG 1.947249
AZN 1.836578
BAM 1.956668
BBD 2.180568
BDT 131.238242
BGN 1.957494
BHD 0.407188
BIF 3209.824492
BMD 1.080304
BND 1.451244
BOB 7.462312
BRL 6.1236
BSD 1.079979
BTN 92.310967
BWP 14.947634
BYN 3.534268
BYR 21173.966824
BZD 2.169263
CAD 1.547477
CDF 3103.714416
CHF 0.954227
CLF 0.026683
CLP 1023.923577
CNY 7.85403
CNH 7.861154
COP 4499.629996
CRC 542.540775
CUC 1.080304
CUP 28.628067
CVE 110.313956
CZK 24.963354
DJF 192.315348
DKK 7.461144
DOP 68.200267
DZD 144.67225
EGP 54.63391
ERN 16.204566
ETB 142.965047
FJD 2.517703
FKP 0.83802
GBP 0.834508
GEL 2.981617
GGP 0.83802
GHS 16.741815
GIP 0.83802
GMD 77.90337
GNF 9345.931385
GTQ 8.334868
GYD 226.790265
HKD 8.406718
HNL 27.622852
HRK 7.533715
HTG 141.078347
HUF 403.609798
IDR 18096.181455
ILS 3.998477
IMP 0.83802
INR 92.482752
IQD 1413.641819
IRR 45459.082174
ISK 143.913941
JEP 0.83802
JMD 169.081799
JOD 0.76588
JPY 161.174964
KES 139.615046
KGS 93.367656
KHR 4316.070833
KMF 492.954431
KPW 972.280671
KRW 1591.278891
KWD 0.333119
KYD 0.898525
KZT 543.839812
LAK 23379.567816
LBP 96570.53158
LKR 319.081266
LRD 216.018799
LSL 19.809457
LTL 3.189859
LVL 0.653465
LYD 5.204117
MAD 10.402892
MDL 19.421485
MGA 5051.880988
MKD 61.568244
MMK 2267.986314
MNT 3760.25671
MOP 8.657971
MRU 42.943558
MUR 49.285269
MVR 16.680361
MWK 1872.196091
MXN 21.989273
MYR 4.793305
MZN 69.017972
NAD 19.809457
NGN 1659.603081
NIO 39.724769
NOK 11.275472
NPR 148.041765
NZD 1.88167
OMR 0.415902
PAB 1.080304
PEN 3.972097
PGK 4.428474
PHP 61.911735
PKR 302.611908
PLN 4.195843
PYG 8593.611468
QAR 3.932315
RON 4.987798
RSD 117.419998
RUB 91.675564
RWF 1535.109837
SAR 4.050871
SBD 9.182375
SCR 15.557638
SDG 648.746723
SEK 10.76356
SGD 1.451517
SHP 0.84895
SLE 24.603912
SLL 22653.44491
SOS 616.379778
SRD 40.085368
STD 22360.120571
SVC 9.452454
SYP 14045.961696
SZL 19.809457
THB 36.892808
TJS 11.758751
TMT 3.778964
TND 3.35685
TOP 2.60184
TRY 40.957976
TTD 7.325636
TWD 35.904826
TZS 2861.115011
UAH 44.615362
UGX 3947.904336
USD 1.080304
UYU 45.573275
UZS 13956.846588
VES 75.172309
VND 27705.289404
VUV 133.291442
WST 3.0653
XAF 657.272575
XAG 0.032022
XAU 0.000346
XCD 2.924752
XDR 0.813245
XOF 657.272575
XPF 119.331742
YER 265.769471
ZAR 20.12255
ZMK 9724.033513
ZMW 30.290151
ZWL 347.857586
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    68

    0%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.44

    0%

  • NGG

    0.1400

    65.92

    +0.21%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1800

    9.87

    -1.82%

  • RIO

    -0.5800

    59.65

    -0.97%

  • SCS

    0.0100

    11.33

    +0.09%

  • GSK

    -0.5300

    37.34

    -1.42%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    13.02

    +0.31%

  • BCC

    0.4300

    99.34

    +0.43%

  • BCE

    -0.6250

    22.155

    -2.82%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    50.63

    -0.08%

  • AZN

    -0.0700

    72.53

    -0.1%

  • BP

    -0.0960

    33.714

    -0.28%

  • CMSD

    0.0200

    22.84

    +0.09%

  • VOD

    -0.1380

    9.132

    -1.51%

  • BTI

    -0.4250

    40.675

    -1.04%

Concerns and impatience over mining the world's seabeds
Concerns and impatience over mining the world's seabeds / Photo: Mike LEYRAL - AFP

Concerns and impatience over mining the world's seabeds

The prospect of large-scale mining to extract valuable minerals from the depths of the Pacific Ocean, once a distant vision, has grown more real, raising alarms among the oceans' most fervent defenders.

Text size:

"I think this is a real and imminent risk," Emma Wilson of the Deep Sea Conservation Coalition, an umbrella organization of environmental groups and scientific bodies, told AFP.

"There are plenty of stakeholders that are flagging the significant environmental risks."

And the long-awaited treaty to protect the high seas, even if it is adopted in negotiations resuming on Monday, is unlikely to alleviate risks anytime soon: it will not take effect immediately and will have to come to terms with the International Seabed Authority (ISA).

That agency, established under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, has 167 member states.

It has authority over the ocean floors outside of member states' Exclusive Economic Zones (which extend up to 200 nautical miles, or 370 kilometers, from coastlines).

But conservation groups say the ISA has two glaringly contradictory missions: protecting the sea floors under the high seas while organizing the activities of industries eager to mine untapped resources on the ocean floor.

For now, some 30 research centers and enterprises have been approved to explore -- but not exploit -- limited areas.

Mining activities are not supposed to begin before negotiators adopt a mining code, already under discussion for nearly a decade.

- Making waves -

But the small Pacific island nation of Nauru, impatient with the plodding pace of progress, made waves in June 2021 by invoking a clause allowing it to demand relevant rules be adopted within two years.

Once that deadline is reached, the government could request a mining contract for Nori (Nauru Ocean Resources), a subsidiary of Canada's The Metals Company.

Nauru has offered what it called a "good faith" promise to hold off until after an ISA assembly in July, in hopes it will adopt a mining code.

"The only thing we need is rules and regulations in place so that people are all responsible actors," Nauru's ambassador to the ISA Margo Deiye told AFP.

But it is "very unlikely" that a code will be agreed by July, said Pradeep Singh, a sea law expert at the Research Institute for Sustainability, in Potsdam, Germany.

"There's just too many items on the list that still need to be resolved," he told AFP. Those items, he said, include the highly contentious issue of how profits from undersea mining would be shared, and how environmental impacts should be measured.

NGOs thus fear that Nori could obtain a mining contract without the protections provided by a mining code.

Conservation groups complain that ISA procedures are "obscure" and its leadership is "pro-extraction."

The agency's secretary-general, Michael Lodge, insists that those accusations have "absolutely no substance whatsoever."

He noted that contracts are awarded by the ISA's Council, not its secretariat.

"This is the only industry...that has been fully regulated before it starts," he said, adding that the reason there is no undersea mining "anywhere in the world right now is because of the existence of the ISA."

- Target: 2024 -

Regardless, The Metals Company is making preparations.

"We'll be ready, and aim to be in production by the end of 2024," chief executive Gerard Barron told AFP.

He said the company plans to collect 1.3 million tons of material in its first year and up to 12 million tons by 2028, all "with the lightest set of impacts."

Barron said tons of polymetallic nodules (rich in minerals such as manganese, nickel, cobalt, copper and rare earths), which had settled to the ocean floor over the centuries, could easily be scraped up.

This would occur in the so-called Clipperton Fracture Zone, where Nori in late 2022 conducted "historic" tests at a depth of four kilometers (2.4 miles).

But Jessica Battle of the WWF conservation group said it is not that simple. Companies might, for example, suck up matter several yards (meters) down, not just from the seabed surface.

"It's a real problem to open up a new extractive frontier in a place where you know so little, with no regulations," she told AFP. "It will be a disaster."

Scientists and advocacy groups say mining could destroy habitats and species, some of them still unknown but possibly crucial to food chains; could disturb the ocean's capacity to absorb human-emitted carbon dioxide; and could generate noises that might disrupt whales' ability to communicate.

- Moratorium calls -

"The deep ocean is the least known part of the ocean," said deep-sea biologist Lisa Levin of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography. "So change might take place without anybody ever seeing it."

She has signed a petition calling for a moratorium on mining. Some companies and about a dozen countries support such a call, including France and Chile.

With its slogan, "A battery in a rock," The Metals Company emphasizes the world's need for metals used in electric-vehicle batteries; Nauru makes the same case.

But while island nations are among the first to feel the impact of global warming, Nauru says it can't wait forever for the funds rich countries have promised to help it adapt to those impacts.

"We're tired of waiting," said Deiye, the Nauru ambassador.

And Lodge says people should keep the anti-extraction arguments in perspective.

Of the 54 percent of seabeds under ISA jurisdiction, he said, "less than half a percent is under exploration... and of that half a percent, less than one percent is likely ever to be exploited."

O.Pereira--NZN