
Transnational companies, finding an ally in United States President Donald Trump and his extractivist agenda, are pushing to mine the seafloor for valuable minerals 鈥 despite widespread concerns about the potential ecological and climate impacts.
Deep-sea mining involves on the seafloor 鈥 formed over millions of years 鈥 containing cobalt, nickel, copper and manganese. The of seafloor deposits are manganese crusts, sulphide deposits and polymetallic nodules 鈥 small rocks strewn across the ocean floor.
Corporations and countries, such as Russia, Japan, China, the Cook Islands and Papua New Guinea, are looking to exploit the (CCZ), a vast expanse of Pacific Ocean seafloor about the size of Europe that contains of polymetallic nodules. However, their efforts to start large-scale deep-sea mining have stalled, largely due to a lack of established regulations and growing global opposition to the destructive industry.
While countries can currently allow mining in their domestic waters, the International Seabed Authority (ISA) 鈥 the intergovernmental body formed under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) to regulate deep-sea mining 鈥 is yet to establish a formal code for commercial mining in international waters.
Despite this, Trump is pushing to fast-track deep-sea mining in international waters. He signed an on April 24 to 鈥渆xpedite the process for reviewing and issuing seabed mineral exploration licenses and commercial recovery permits in areas beyond national jurisdiction under the Deep Seabed Hard Mineral Resources Act [DSHMRA闭鈥.
The DSHMRA, established by Congress in 1980, authorises the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), a US government regulatory agency, to issue deep-sea mining permits. NOAA has exploration permits in the CCZ under the DSHMRA 鈥 two of which are held by military corporation Lockheed Martin 鈥 but has never granted permission for commercial exploitation. 聽
While the US never ratified the UNCLOS, in theory, it is still bound to the legislation that prohibits deep-sea mining in international waters . Legal experts that the executive order falsely purports the US as a decision-making power over international waters, and that bypassing the ISA to allow deep-sea mining would be in violation of international law.
Nevertheless, a few days after the order was signed, The Metals Company (TMC) 鈥 a Canadian deep-sea mining concern 鈥 for commercial and exploration mining permits in the CCZ to NOAA.
The US interior department also on May 20 that it would begin evaluating a potential mineral lease sale in the waters off the coast of American Samoa.
鈥楪old rush鈥
NOAA is in favour of deep-sea mining, calling it the 鈥渘ext gold rush鈥 and committed to processing applications 鈥渨ithout undue delays鈥 in an April 25 . The Trump administration has also taken a hatchet to NOAA, sacking and proposing to slash more than a quarter of its budget, which raises concerns over the agency鈥檚 capacity to properly regulate deep-sea mining.
The ISA, as the regulatory agency tasked with protecting international waters, seems . It does not have a coherent environmental policy, environmental management plan or dedicated scientific division, and has been captured by corporate interests.
A 2022 New York Times revealed how the ISA shared the locations of valuable seafloor areas to TMC and allocated them for the company鈥檚 future use, and that ISA employees formerly responsible for drafting regulations moved to work as consultants for TMC.
The ISA collects a (A$780,000) application fee for each exploration permit that it grants, as well as a yearly administrative fee of US$47,000 (A$73,000) per contractor 鈥 representing a huge conflict of interest.
Despite a lack of deep-sea mining regulations, the ISA has already granted to 22 contractors. Some of the 鈥渢rials鈥 undertaken under these exploration permits were condemned by environmental campaigners as mining disguised as research, such as TMC鈥檚 extraction of in the CCZ in November 2022.
Former ISA secretary-general Michael Lodge publicly supports deep-sea mining, and has criticised scientists for voicing their concerns over its environmental impacts. He featured in an for DeepGreen, the previous name of TMC, and posted photos of himself on social media wearing the company鈥檚 branding. The post and video have since been removed.
Greenwashing
The ISA has aligned itself with TMC鈥檚 slick greenwashing campaigns claiming deep-sea mining is necessary for the renewables transition, because the metals extracted are components of solar panels, wind turbines and batteries. This is despite battery producers from using cobalt and nickel, in favour of lithium, and the possibility of global demand for minerals being with available technology and proper recycling systems.
Indicative of this, car companies, such as Volkswagen, BMW and Volvo, and tech companies signed on to a supporting a global moratorium on deep-sea mining.
Meanwhile, TMC has all pretence of environmental messaging 鈥 presumably to cosy up to the Trump administration 鈥 now proclaiming the need to compete with China鈥檚 control of critical minerals, help missile production and build resilient US supply chains.
The current ISA secretary-general Leticia Reis de Carvalho, who took over from Lodge in January, that deep-sea mining 鈥渃an be sustainable鈥, and says the ISA鈥檚 mining code should be finalised by the end of the year.
This would allow large-scale deep-sea mining operations to commence, with devastating consequences. If all of the current exploration licences were converted into commercial ones, it would constitute the in planetary history.
Proponents 鈥 citing research papers funded by mining companies 鈥 that deep-sea mining is less environmentally damaging than terrestrial mining, but have measured and its harmful, and potentially irreversible, impacts.
Deep-sea mining supporters have deliberately cultivated an image of the seafloor as a featureless moonscape devoid of life, to downplay the impacts of mining. TMC CEO Gerard Barron has deep-sea mining to just picking up 鈥渞ocks that sit on the abyssal plain鈥.
However, deep-sea ecosystems contain incredibly complex and organisms 鈥 considered as diverse as tropical rainforests 鈥 and play a crucial role in climate regulation.
Undiscovered species
Scientists estimate that of the species in the CCZ have been described 鈥 deep-sea mining threatens to destroy potentially thousands of undiscovered species. Each time scientists embark on a deep-sea expedition, they encounter .
Highly disruptive mining operations have immediate and lasting impacts. A recent study published in Nature looking at a mining test site used in 1979 in the CCZ found that biological impacts remain 鈥 later. The tracks made by the underwater mining vehicle are .
One method of deep-sea mining proposed by TMC involves vehicles dredging the top layer of the seafloor, piping the slurry to the surface, separating the polymetallic nodules from the sediment and dumping the tailings back into the ocean. This process produces large sediment plumes that spread for hundreds of kilometres, blanketing ecosystems and clogging the gills of sea animals.
Noise pollution from deep-sea mining operations is to travel for more than 500 kilometres, potentially disrupting the migration patterns of animals sensitive to sound, such as whales.
The mine tailings contain mercury and lead, which are to many organisms and could be . This would have knock-on effects, such as destroying the health and livelihoods of people who rely on healthy ocean ecosystems.
Greenhouse gases
About one-third of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions are absorbed by underwater organisms and deep-sea mining could indirectly accelerate global warming by killing GHG-sequestering bacteria. Disturbing the seafloor also huge amounts of stored GHG emissions, such as carbon dioxide and methane, contributing significantly to global warming.
The 鈥溾 鈥 signed by 944 marine science and policy experts from more than 70 countries 鈥 calls for a pause to deep-sea mining, citing the biological impacts.
Deep-sea mining would result in the 鈥渓oss of biodiversity and ecosystem functioning that would be irreversible on multi-generational timescales鈥, the statement said.
Several countries have joined calls from Indigenous communities, NGOs, scientists and environmental activists for a moratorium on deep-sea mining.
, including France, Canada, Switzerland and Pacific Island nations such as Palau and Fiji, have called for a precautionary pause, moratorium or complete ban on deep-sea mining.