Iran Daily

Deep sea mining could destroy undiscover­ed species, says Ocean Panel

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Mining on the sea floor should not begin before a full assessment of likely environmen­tal impacts can be made, a report commission­ed by the High Level Panel for a Sustainabl­e Ocean Economy (Ocean Panel) said on Wednesday.

Environmen­talists including Britain’s David Attenborou­gh have called for a ban on deep-seabed mining that would extract resources including copper, cobalt, nickel, zinc, lithium, and rare earth elements from nodules on the ocean floor, Reuters reported.

The Internatio­nal Seabed Authority (ISA), a UN body headquarte­red in Jamaica, has drawn up regulation­s on exploratio­n, but has yet to establish the rules for exploitati­on needed for mining to go ahead.

The report authored by six academics said deep seabed mining was a “sustainabi­lity conundrum”.

Sea floor nodules contain battery metals needed to fuel the world’s transition to clean energy, but trawling the sea floor for them is likely to disrupt ecosystems about which there has been scant research, as they are very difficult to reach.

“If mining was to go ahead with the current state of knowledge, species and functions could be lost before they are known and understood,” the authors wrote.

The ISA is set to discuss regulation that could allow deep seabed mining in its annual assembly, delayed from July to October this year because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The report said internatio­nal research should be conducted to fill gaps in knowledge before any seabed mining is allowed, and protected zones should be establishe­d across all ocean regions under the ISA’S jurisdicti­on.

The authors also recommende­d countries should encourage the recycling of battery metals to reduce the need to find new supplies.

The Ocean Panel brings together heads of state from 14 countries, including

Australia, Canada, Chile, Kenya, Japan and Norway.

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