HomeNewsOpinionThe real problem with deep-sea mining is it won’t make money

The real problem with deep-sea mining is it won’t make money

Fears of ecosystem damage are tendentious. The issue is volatile commodity prices that will make it hard to finance projects

July 14, 2023 / 15:07 IST
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Deep-Sea Mining
D deep-sea mining would benefit a planet that will have an insatiable hunger for critical minerals as it decarbonizes over the coming decades. (Representative image)

As if the world wasn’t in enough trouble from the warmest week ever measured and record-low sea ice around Antarctica, big business is already gearing up to ransack yet another unspoiled corner of the globe: the deep ocean.

The International Seabed Authority, or ISA, the United Nations body that regulates exploitation of the deep sea floor, will decide in the next few weeks on an application by the Pacific island state of Nauru to open up mining 5 kilometers (3 miles) below the Pacific.

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Environmental groups are united in opposition. The plan will “destabilise delicate ocean ecosystems,” according to the World Wide Fund for Nature, and “rip up the seabed for profits,” in the words of Greenpeace. The
European Academies of Science Advisory Council, an association of science policy specialists, called last month for a moratorium on the practice.

That shouldn’t restrain the ISA from giving the go-ahead. If it could be made to work, deep-sea mining would benefit a planet that will have an insatiable hunger for critical minerals as it decarbonises over the coming decades. It could even provide an economic lifeline for some of the island nations most at risk from rising sea levels. The problem isn’t environmental, but economic: Even if it’s authorised, we’re unlikely to see any large-scale shift of mineral exploitation to the ocean floor.