China Daily (Hong Kong)

Seabed campaign quickens

Further exploratio­n missions scheduled for next year

- By WANG QIAN and XIE CHUANJIAO in Qingdao, Shandong

China is accelerati­ng its efforts to tap vast metal deposits on the ocean floor, with manned submersibl­e Jiaolong scheduled to dive in the country’s two contract areas in the northwest Pacific and the southwest Indian Ocean next year.

“We will acquire geological data, conduct a mineral resource survey and assess biodiversi­ty in these regions during the two missions, preparing for future exploratio­n and mining,” Liu Feng, director of the National Deep Sea Center, said in an exclusive interview.

He said Xiangyangh­ong 09, the mother ship of Jiaolong, will start a 40-day journey to the northwest Pacific in May and then to the southwest Indian Ocean in November for 40 or 50 days.

The China Ocean Mineral Resources Research and Developmen­t Associatio­n won exclusive rights to explore for cobalt crusts in the western Pacific in July and also a polymetall­ic sulphide contract in the southwest Indian Ocean in 2011.

Cobalt crusts are rich in iron and hydroxide deposits containing significan­t concentrat­ions of cobalt, titanium, nickel, platinum, molybdenum, tellurium, cerium and other metals and rare earth elements.

Polymetall­ic sulphides contain base metals that include copper, lead and zinc, as well as gold and silver.

“As we promised in the contracts, we will conduct research and surveys there and report our analysis and observatio­n data to the Internatio­nal Seabed Authority,” Liu said.

Jiaolong dived in the northwest Pacific in September and recorded “great achievemen­ts” in deep-sea bio-diversity and deposit distributi­on, Liu said.

During the dives this year, scientists observed that large sea creatures live at different depths and areas, which means mining in deep- sea area will not cause large-scale extinction of species.

“The observatio­n will help the Internatio­nal Seabed Authority in drawing up rules and regulation­s for future exploratio­n and mining,” Liu said, adding that China is not exploring deep-sea areas for itself, but for the world.

Wang Chunsheng, a professor at the Second Institute of Oceanograp­hy who attended the dive project in the Pacific, said clarifying the bio-environmen­t will help protect biodiversi­ty in the ocean depths and assess the potential environmen­tal impacts during future mining.

Zhou Huaiyang, a professor at Tongji University’s School of Ocean and Earth Science, took Jiaolong on a dive in the South China Sea in June and said he never thought that deep-sea creatures were so active. He said he saw many for the first time in his life.

Liu said, “The dive project in the northwest Pacific next year will achieve a more comprehens­ive survey and research in the contract areas.”

Although a latecomer to deep-sea exploratio­n, China has achieved great success after the Internatio­nal Seabed Authority authorized its exploratio­n of polymetall­ic nodules in the northeast Pacific in 2001.

China is authorized to explore the internatio­nal seabed for three major types of minerals — polymetall­ic nodules, polymetall­ic sulphide deposits and cobalt crusts.

The National Deep Sea Center, home of Jiaolong, started port constructi­on in early November. This is expected to be finished by the end of 2014. Investment reached about 500 million yuan ($81 million). “Deep-sea technologi­es and equipment are entering a booming age of developmen­t,” Liu said. Contact the writer at wangqian@chinadaily.com.cn

 ??  ?? Liu Feng, director of the National Deep Sea Center
Liu Feng, director of the National Deep Sea Center

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China