Oman Daily Observer

‘Aquaman’ warns Sundance of deep-sea mining peril

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as hunky, sea-dwelling superhero “Aquaman,” but actor Jason Momoa brought a stark and sober warning about the perils of deep-sea mining to the Sundance film festival on Friday.

The Hawaiian-born A-lister narrates “Deep Rising,” a new documentar­y about the frenzied efforts by resource-hungry corporatio­ns to scrape valuable metals from vast swathes of the Pacific floor.

Supporters of deep-sea mining claim that pellets of nickel and cobalt — used in electric car batteries — can be convenient­ly scooped off the seabed, helping reduce our fossil fuel reliance.

But conservati­on groups and scientists fear this could devastate poorly understood marine systems that play a crucial role in regulating the climate, and some nations have called for bans.

“There’s moments where I cried and got emotional” narrating the film, Momoa told AFP, before its world premiere at the festival in Utah.

“It’s very important, using your power for good. It’s all the things I’m passionate about,” added the actor, who took marine biology courses as a student, and is a UN Environmen­t Program advocate for the oceans.

The documentar­y follows key players in the fledgling industry including The Metals Company, a Canadian group pushing to mine the Clarion Clipperton Zone — a vast expanse of seafloor near Hawaii.

The film goes behind-the-scenes as its chief executive Gerard Barron courts wealthy investors with promises that little harm will be done to “the most barren, desolate part of the planet,” in contrast to the devastatio­n that ongoing mining is causing rainforest­s.

But “Deep Rising” director Matthieu Rytz told AFP that “we know so little” about the real risk to the deep ocean.

“Extraction on the seafloor, it’s just a rush, because we don’t have enough science to really understand what’s happening there,” he said.

‘THE NEW OIL’

Still, The Metals Company has said it expects to be mining 10 million tonnes of material from the ocean floor every year, starting in 2025.

And it is just one of about 20 research institutes or corporatio­ns that hold ocean exploratio­n contracts, awaiting the go-ahead to begin commercial­scale mining.

Rytz’s film argues that the energy crisis has no “silver bullet,” and that the brewing race to harvest critical metals is not a solution but “the new oil,” and could trigger future resource wars.

It shows meetings of the Internatio­nal Seabed Authority, described by Rytz as an “obscure room in Kingston, Jamaica” where delegates decide “the future of 65 per cent of the planet’s surface.”

“This is beyond national jurisdicti­on. It’s the high seas,” said Rytz. “It belongs to all of us or none of us.” Rytz speaks in the film with scientists who argue that alternativ­e clean, more abundant energy sources such as hydrogen should be explored for car engines, or that transport options such as highspeed rail should be expanded.

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