The deep ocean sustains crucial processes that make the entire planet habitable, from driving ocean currents that regulate our weather to storing carbon and buffering our planet against the impacts of climate change.
Deep sea mining schematic - G. Mannaerts, WikimediaCommons
Campaigners Demand Global Ban on Deep-Sea Mining
As talks resume, supporters of a moratorium are also calling for the
ouster of the International Seabed Authority's leader, who faces an
election on July 29.
As talks to establish global policies on deep-sea mining resumed in
Jamaica on Monday, Greenpeace International renewed its demand for a
moratorium on the practice, the path also backed other civil society
and Indigenous groups, at least hundreds of science and policy
experts, and 27 countries.
"The science is clear—there can't be deep-sea mining without
environmental cost and the only solution is a moratorium. The more
we know about deep-sea mining, the harder it is to justify it," said
Greenpeace campaigner Louisa Casson, who is attending the United
Nations-affiliated International Seabed Authority's (ISA) 29th
session in Kingston.
"Governments at the ISA must not dance to the tune of the industry
and approve rushed regulations for the benefit of a few over the
interests of Pacific communities and the opinion of scientists,"
Casson argued, as companies and countries see chances to cash in on
the clean energy transition by extracting metals including cobalt,
copper, and nickel.
"The deep ocean sustains crucial processes that make the entire
planet habitable, from driving ocean currents that regulate our
weather to storing carbon and buffering our planet against the
impacts of climate change."
The Associated Pressreported Monday that although the ISA has not
allowed any extraction during debates, it "has granted 31 mining
exploration contracts," and "much of the ongoing exploration is
centered in the Clarion-Clipperton Fracture Zone, which covers 1.7
million square miles (4.5 million square kilometers) between Hawaii
and Mexico."
The Mexican government last year endorsed a moratorium and
Democratic Hawaii Gov. Josh Green last week signed a bill banning
seabed mining in state waters, citing "environmental risks and
constitutional rights to have a clean and healthy environment."
Ahead of the meeting in Jamaica, Deep Sea Conservation Coalition
campaign lead Sofia Tsenikli highlighted that "gouging minerals from
the seafloor poses an existential threat that goes far beyond the
immediate destruction of deep-sea wildlife and habitats."
"The deep ocean sustains crucial processes that make the entire
planet habitable, from driving ocean currents that regulate our
weather to storing carbon and buffering our planet against the
impacts of climate change," Tsenikli said. "States must now protect
the ocean and not allow any more damage."
The ISA was established under the 1982 U.N. Convention on the Law of
the Sea and a related 1994 agreement, and is responsible for waters
not under the control of specific nations. As Common Dreamsreported
earlier this month, some diplomats have accused British lawyer
Michael Lodge, its current secretary-general, of trying to speed up
the start of mining.
"The rush to complete the mining code was triggered by the Pacific
island state of Nauru, which is expected to submit a mining license
application on behalf of Canada's the Metals Company (TMC) later
this year, regardless of whether or not regulations are complete,"
Reutersnoted Monday.
After ISA's 36-member Council negotiates the "Mining Code" over the
next two weeks, its full Assembly is scheduled to meet on July 29 to
vote on the next secretary-general, with Lodge facing a challenge
from Brazil's Leticia Carvalho for the top post.
"It is time for change at the ISA," Casson of Greenpeace declared
Monday. "A third term for Michael Lodge would not only put the
oceans under threat but also risk further damaging public trust in
the regulator. Mining companies are impatient to get started and
mounting evidence indicates that Lodge is overstepping his
supposedly-neutral role to align with commercial interests."
"The ISA must listen to millions of people and the growing number of
governments calling for a halt to deep-sea mining," she added. "It
is time to put conservation at the heart of the ISA's work."
In preparation for the talks in Kingston, Environment Oregon
Research & Policy Center, U.S. Public Interest Research Group (PIRG)
Education Fund, and Frontier Group last month released a report
showing that not only would deep-sea mining destroy "a vibrant,
biodiverse place, teeming with complex ecosystems and thousands,
possibly millions of species," but also it isn't necessary.
"Disposable electronic devices are creating a toxic e-waste mess.
Now, some mining companies are trying to convince policymakers that
we need to wreak havoc on the ocean to source the materials to make
more," said Charlie Fisher of the Oregon State PIRG Foundation.
"This report shows that we don't need to ruin the deep sea to make
the products we need. There is a more sustainable path: Make
long-lasting, fixable electronics and recycle them when they no
longer work."