The Fiji Times

Pacific leaders join global call for a halt to deep sea mining

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PACIFIC civil society groups and leaders are urging global leaders at the United Nations Oceans Conference in Lisbon, Portugal to place a halt on deep sea mining (DSM) until there is enough scientific research to assess and understand the environmen­tal and social harm that it poses.

This week a side event of the conference was hosted by the Government of Tuvalu, Developmen­t Alternativ­es with Women for A New Era (DAWN) and the Pacific Parliament­arians’ Alliance on Deep Sea Mining (PPADSM) to amplify the Pacific’s call for collective stewardshi­p and responsibi­lity in the deep seabed of the high seas area that is considered the common heritage of mankind.

PPADSM chairperso­n and Vanuatu Opposition Leader Ralph Regenvanu, who was joined by Tuvalu’s Permanent Representa­tive to the UN, Ambassador Samuelu Laloniu, Marie Toussaint, the Vice Chair of the Group of the Greens/ European Free Alliance of the European Parliament, Debbie Ngarewa-Packer, Co-Leader of the Maori Party, Aotearoa/New Zealand, and Guam Senator, Sabina Perez, called on leaders to stop “what could be one of humanity’s final follies,” deep sea mining.

“I urge you all to join us today to draw a blue line on deep sea mining,” Mr Regenvanu said.

“As we come together in the 2022 UN Ocean Conference in Lisbon, it is with renewed hope and commitment that we, as a global society, can make the important shifts in how we engage with our environmen­t, of which we are part, and particular­ly with the ocean.”

United Nations Secretary General, Antonio Guterres this week declared that “we are facing an ocean emergency” and that the “egoism” of some nations was hampering efforts to agree on a long-awaited treaty to protect the world’s oceans.

PPADSM is calling for new scientific research to understand the impacts of deep-sea mining on the world’s largest and most stable carbon and methane sink and to also understand its impact on fisheries and fishing grounds, human rights - in particular, rights of indigenous peoples - and rights of nature.

Fiji has imposed a ban on DSM within its national jurisdicti­on since 2019, and has joined Palau and Samoa to propose a global moratorium on DSM at the UN Ocean Conference. In March this year, Tuvalu rescinded its deepsea mining sponsorshi­p applicatio­n, making it the first Internatio­nal. In March this year, Tuvalu rescinded its deep-sea mining sponsorshi­p applicatio­n, making it the first Internatio­nal Seabed Authority member state to halt proceeding with an earlier intention to participat­e in deep sea mining.

“For Tuvalu, this decision is an expression of our ‘common stewardshi­p responsibi­lity’ in an area considered to be the common heritage of mankind,” Mr Laloniu said.

“Our common stewardshi­p responsibi­lity is to ensure stringent environmen­tal protection in light of the potential harm that deep-sea mining could entail on ecosystems, biodiversi­ty, fisheries and worse still, the potential harm on the climatic function that the deep ocean plays, which will be a liability borne by the sponsoring state.

“As Tuvaluans we have a deep understand­ing of what it means to be at the forefront of the climate emergency, one not of our making. As such our multilater­al engagement­s and positions including on internatio­nal legal norms are informed and shaped by our shared values and responsibi­lities as a people, which prioritize the health and well-being of our people, environmen­t and safeguard[ing] our culture in perpetuity in the face of an existentia­l crisis.”

The Alliance has appealed to the Republic of Nauru, the Cook Islands, the Republic of Kiribati, and the Kingdom of Tonga to follow the lead of Tuvalu, and to draw back from the brink.

Nauru, sponsor of The Metals Company, triggered an obscure legal provision called the ‘2year rule’, that would allow the Internatio­nal Seabed Authority (ISA) to begin taking applicatio­ns for commercial deep sea mining projects by July 2023 with whatever rules are in place at that time.

Because of weaknesses in the existing regime governing oceans and the need for a reinterpre­tation of the common heritage of mankind, PPADSM has also called for appropriat­e reforms to ISA that would strengthen transparen­cy, and ensure accountabi­lity and due diligence in its operation.

There are three main types of deposits that deep sea miners target- Polymetall­ic Nodules, Seabed Massive Sulphides and Cobalt Rich Crusts- which provide metals and rare earth elements.

Senator Perez said the ocean was at risk of being pillaged and despoiled because of the relentless pursuit of profit combined with the expansion of militarism and colonizati­on and the advancemen­t of modern technology.

“It is evident that deep sea mining has the potential to become a fierce new form of imperialis­m that further threatens our political, economic, and spiritual sovereignt­y and cultural survivorsh­ip,” she added.

Ms Ngarewa-Packer echoed the same sentiments adding that we must always think of how our decisions today would affect future generation­s.

“The reality is... and we learnt during COVID-19, we learnt in the middle of the pandemic, that no matter how rich, it didn’t matter how powerful you were, we were all taken down to our knees in the same way,” she added.

Dr Mariama Williams, Director of the Institute of Law and Economics in Jamaica and DAWN Senior Associate said at the event that “we have approached some levels of insanity that really seems incredible”.

“There’s really no business case for deep sea mining other than pure profitabil­ity and exploitati­on.

There’s no economic case for deep sea mining other than a pure predatory perspectiv­e on limitless growth and accumulati­on. All the actors that are pushing this are not living in the jurisdicti­ons that will be inundated, that will be destroyed and decimated by the actions that they will be perpetuati­ng

“And I think that is a moral and a criminal thing that we need to keep in front of us,” Dr Williams said.

 ?? Picture: PINA ?? Pacific civil society groups and leaders are urging global leaders at the United Nations Oceans Conference in Lisbon, Portugal to place a halt on deep sea mining until there is enough scientific research to assess and understand the environmen­tal and social harm that it poses.
Picture: PINA Pacific civil society groups and leaders are urging global leaders at the United Nations Oceans Conference in Lisbon, Portugal to place a halt on deep sea mining until there is enough scientific research to assess and understand the environmen­tal and social harm that it poses.

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