Connect with us

Energy & Critical Metals

Canada Backs Moratorium on Deep Sea Mining, Opposing Vancouver Company’s Plans

The Canadian government says it will back an international moratorium against efforts to open up the deep sea to mining after a Vancouver-based company…

Share this article:

Published

on

This article was originally published by Bussiness In Vancover

The Canadian government says it will back an international moratorium against efforts to open up the deep sea to mining after a Vancouver-based company sparked a process to regulate the industry.

The announcement, made Monday by three senior cabinet ministers, comes nearly five months after Canada declared an “effective moratorium” on deep sea mining in domestic waters and ahead of three weeks of negotiations in Kingston, Jamaica, where delegates from around the world are hashing out the future of the industry.

Federal fisheries minister Joyce Murray said the decision to back the moratorium was due to a lack of a strong regulatory regime and a poor understanding of the comprehensive impacts seabed mining will have on the environment.

“The protection, conservation, restoration and sustainable use of ocean ecosystems is essential to all life on earth,” said federal fisheries minister Joyce Murray in a statement.

Two years ago, The Metals Company partnered with the Pacific island nation of Nauru to submit an application to mine an abyssal plain several kilometres below the ocean’s surface between Hawaii and Mexico. That triggered a two-year countdown in which the International Seabed Authority (ISA) — the little-known United Nations body — was required to write the rules of the road for deep sea mining.

The ISA negotiations could lead to an opening up of seabed mining as early as this year. A spokesperson for The Metals Company was not immediately available to comment on Canada’s decision or confirm whether it sought to apply for a mining license later this year.​

A pilot collector vehicle designed by the company Allseas awaits deployment from the Hidden Gem during the first integrated system trials in the Clarion-Clipperton Zone of the Pacific Ocean since the 1970s. The Metals Company

​Over the last two years, leaders of 16 other countries — including Spain, New Zealand, France and Germany — have opposed the move. They cite scientists and a coalition of opponents who say mining the deep sea threatens to disturb an ecosystem and ocean carbon pump whose workings are little known to humanity.

The Metals Company, meanwhile, has been actively carrying out exploratory mining expeditions to the Clarrio-Clipperton Zone. In this area, polymetallic nodules the size of potatoes were discovered more than 120 years ago.

The nodules form layer by layer over millions of years as dissolved metals precipitate out of seawater around a sunken shark tooth, fossil or shard of rock. The Vancouver-based company says the metals — which include nickel, copper, cobalt and manganese — represent “a battery in a rock” that could provide a stable supply of metals to feed an electric vehicle fleet equivalent to all the cars currently on the road in the United States.

Polymetallic nodules collected by The Metals Company during a deep sea trial in the Pacific Ocean in November 2022. The Metals Company

The company is looking to mine the deep sea with robotic vehicles that suck up the nodules off the ocean floor in a process they say will be less damaging than land-based mining.

In the past, collecting and raising them from 4,000 metres under the sea has proven technically challenging and too expensive to conduct commercially. The Metals Company says its latest deep-sea trial shows its technology works.

In the fall of 2022, the company said it had successfully deployed its treaded vehicle in the Pacific’s Clarion-Clipperton Fracture Zone, sucking up more than 3,000 tonnes of polymetallic nodules and transporting them up a 4.3-kilometre system of pipes to its mother ship.

But earlier this year, three advocacy groups claimed that The Metals Company appeared to be caught violating its protocols after two videos were leaked purporting to show waste sediment getting dumped into the Pacific Ocean during the expedition.

In a statement to Glacier Media at the time, The Metals Company confirmed the leaked videos captured an incident at sea in October 2022, when a surge of water overwhelmed a machine that separates the deep-sea nodules from sediment, known as a “cyclone separator.” 

Describing the incident as “a minor overflow,” the company said some sediment and fragments of nodules poured out of the separator and over the ship’s deck during a seven- to eight-hour test run.

According to company documents, sediment washed from the nodules on the ship is supposed to be returned deep under the sea before it’s released. That way, the company says, the risk it threatens marine species is minimized. 

But the videos, allegedly captured and leaked by scientists paid by The Metals Company, appear to show the Hidden Gem discharging sediment directly into the ocean’s surface. 

Based in Vancouver, @themetalsco is looking to be the first to commercially mine the deep sea in a move it says will power an EV revolution.

Today, scientists aboard the company’s ships leaked videos of deep sea sediment overflowing into the sea. pic.twitter.com/hWgvR7mFfQ
— Stefan Labbé (@StefanLabbe) January 11, 2023

The latest round of negotiations in Jamaica has also prompted several protests worldwide, with some arriving to the island on ships to oppose the proposed regulatory path.

Greenpeace Canada, which has a global campaign to stop deep sea mining, lit up a giant LED octopus near the Global Affairs building in Ottawa last week.

“Protect my home, Minister Joly!” Reads a cartoon speech bubble emerging from its bulbous head.

The Deep Sea Conservation Coalition, initially created over international concerns over the harmful impacts of deep-sea bottom trawling, says it has sent several representatives to Kingston to lobby members to reject proposals “for the largest mining operation humanity has ever seen.”

The organization’s policy officer Emma Wilson said while states have been “rushing” to develop and adopt a mining code for two years, “glaring scientific gaps” still exist.

Greenpeace France Oceans campaigner François Chartier, who is also attending the meeting in Jamaica, said the latest pushback against opening up the sea floor to “reckless companies” shows “their bet has backfired.”
policy
metals
mining
bubble

Share this article:

Uranium Exploration Company Announces Additional Staking in the Athabasca Basin

Source: Streetwise Reports 12/22/2023

Skyharbour Resources Ltd. announced an update from its Canada-based Falcon Project along with additional…

Share this article:

Published

on

By

Continue Reading
Energy & Critical Metals

Tesla Launches New Mega Factory Project In Shanghai, Designed To Manufacture 10,000 Megapacks Per Year

Tesla Launches New Mega Factory Project In Shanghai, Designed To Manufacture 10,000 Megapacks Per Year

Tesla has launched a new mega factory…

Share this article:

Published

on

Continue Reading
Energy & Critical Metals

Giving thanks and taking stock after “a remarkable year”

An end-of-year thank you to our readers, industry colleagues and advertisers before Electric Autonomy breaks from publishing until Jan. 2
The post Giving…

Share this article:

Published

on

Continue Reading

Trending