Fri | Oct 18, 2024

Proposed regulations for deep-sea mining unresolved

Published:Friday | November 10, 2023 | 12:09 AM
Coral on Moore Reef is visible in Gunggandji Sea Country off the coast of Queensland, on November 13, 2022, in eastern Australia. Debate over proposed regulations for deep-sea mining will stretch into 2024.
Coral on Moore Reef is visible in Gunggandji Sea Country off the coast of Queensland, on November 13, 2022, in eastern Australia. Debate over proposed regulations for deep-sea mining will stretch into 2024.

Debate over proposed regulations for deep-sea mining will stretch into next year as a United Nations agency that presides over the international seabed concluded its last meeting of the year on Wednesday.

The ongoing debate has led to growing concerns that a company or country could end up applying for an ‘exploitation’ or mining licence before any regulatory framework is in place.

Juan José González, president of the International Seabed Authority’s council, told reporters that if an application is submitted, the council has an obligation to discuss it.

“We would prefer, of course, to have the regulations in place,” he said.

The Seabed Authority, which came into existence in November 1994, is headquartered in Kingston, Jamaica.

Michael Lodge, the agency’s secretary general, said the council expects to have a mining code draft by 2025.

However, a Canadian company whose subsidiary is widely expected to be the first to apply for a deep-sea mining licence, said late last week that it expects to do so in mid-2024.

Corey McLachlan, with The Metals Company, noted that while any country or company now has the legal right to apply for such a licence, “we are willing to give (the agency) that additional time and effort”.

The International Seabed Authority has issued more than 30 exploration licences, but no exploitation ones.

Much of the exploration is taking place in an area spanning 1.7 million square miles (4.5 million square kilometres) between Hawaii and Mexico at depths of up to 19,000 feet (6,000 metres).

Among those holding an exploration licence is Nauru Ocean Resources Inc, a subsidiary of The Metals Company. It is working with the government of Nauru, a small island in the Pacific, which has pushed for deep-sea mining.

Those seeking to launch deep-sea mining operations say they are meeting an increase in demand for metals, including copper, nickel and cobalt used in clean-energy technologies. They also argue it is cheaper than land mining and would have less of an environmental impact.

However, scientists and environmental activists have warned that such mining could unleash noise, light and smothering dust storms. They say not enough is known about the world’s deep seas, noting that less than one per cent has been explored.

More than 20 countries have called for a moratorium or a ban, and companies, including BMW and Samsung, have promised to avoid using minerals mined from the ocean’s abyss.

The meeting that ended on Wednesday followed nearly two weeks’ worth of negotiations on issues including inspection, enforcement, royalties, environmental concerns, and financial terms of potential contracts.

“All countries may well have very different positions on all sorts of things, but all countries agree there should be no exploitation without regulation,” Lodge said.

AP