The mining company was called DeepGreen, but is in the process of becoming a larger entity called simply The Metals Company. The poor people are the eleven thousand inhabitants of Nauru, a tiny independent island in the Western Pacific with no visible means of support.

And the slow-moving, distant regulators are the Jamaica-based International Seabed Authority (ISA), a body created in 1994 under the UN Law of the Sea to govern activities on the seabed in the areas beyond the reach of national laws (i.e. most of the planet).

In principle, the main function of the ISA is to control mining on that seabed, but so far it has only issued exploration permits. Nobody wanted to do any actual mining, and business has been so slow that after 27 years it hasn’t even finalised the rules that would govern deep-sea mining yet.

But vital new technologies, from mobile phones and computers to batteries for electric vehicles and energy storage, have now created a huge demand for cobalt, nickel, copper, manganese and rare earths – all to be found in vast quantities in potato-sized ‘polymetallic nodules’ on some parts of the deep sea floor.

So DeepGreen partnered with Nauru’s president, Lionel Aingimea, whose country has exclusive control of 75,000 sq. km. of seabed in the Clarion-Clipperton Zone of the North Pacific (between Hawaii and Mexico), and told the ISA on 30 June that it wants to start mining the area within two years.

The beauty of this strategy is that if the ISA has not completed its long-delayed ‘Mining Code’ within two years of getting such a request, the country making the request can just go ahead and start mining under the current (almost non-existent) rules.

You have to feel sorry for Nauru. It’s only the size of Manhattan up to 42nd Street, and 80% of that tiny territory was strip-mined for phosphates by colonial powers during the 20th century. Almost half its population has type 2 diabetes (70% are obese), and it has no resources left worth mentioning.

One feels less sorry for Vancouver-based DeepGreen, which just wants to make a lot of money, but CEO Gerard Barron does know how to talk the talk: “The world is on a massive push to move away from fossil fuels, and what do we need if we want to do that? We need to build a lot of batteries.”

He calls the polymetallic nodules “batteries in a rock”, but it’s not quite that simple. The nodules would be sucked up in a seawater-sediment slurry by huge undersea machines from as deep as 6,000 metres, passed up to the surface in a giant riser, then separated from the sediment and seawater (which would be pumped back down to the bottom).

“We expect to entrain only 5 cm of subsea sediment and redeposit over 90% of this sediment back at the sea floor,” said Barron. “We expect most of this sediment to resettle within hours-to-days within tens to thousands of metres from origin.”

“The sediment in the abyssal plain stores 15 times less carbon than on average on land and there are no known mechanisms for this carbon to be released into the atmosphere from 4 km depth,” he adds, so he’s not your old-fashioned smash-and-grab mining promoter.

But why is Barron in such a hurry? Perhaps because DeepGreen is listing The Metals Co. on the Nasdaq exchange and needs to show some ‘progress’ to potential investors. But the DeepGreen/Nauru initiative has triggered a backlash that means no actual mining is likely to happen for at least five years. More likely for ten.

Over 450 marine science and policy experts from 44 countries responded to the DeepGreen/Nauru initiative by signing a statement calling for an immediate moratorium on deep-sea mining. Bigger regional countries like Papua New Guinea, Vanuatu and Fiji have called for a precautionary pause to deep sea mining activities.

Major potential customers for deep-sea metals like BMW Group, Volvo Group and Samsung SDI (battery makers) have declared that they will not allow any seabed minerals in their supply chains until it’s clear that they are environmentally defensible.

We may end up having to do deep-sea mining, because shifting from fossil fuels to sustainable energy will certainly require a great deal of those metals. But there’s huge room for improvement in recycling, and if that’s not enough we still have to weigh the environmental costs of seabed operations vs. mining on land.

A moratorium is definitely the right way to go, and DeepGreen has inadvertently made it more likely.


Author

Gwynne Dyer is an independent journalist whose articles are published in 45 countries.

Gwynne Dyer