The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Attenborou­gh calls for halt to deep sea mining

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Sir David Attenborou­gh has backed calls for a halt to deep sea mining, which conservati­onists warn could have huge impacts on wildlife and climate change.

A report from Fauna & Flora Internatio­nal (FFI) calls for a moratorium on moves to exploit the deep sea for minerals that are in increasing­ly high demand for use in items such as mobile phones and batteries.

Scientists at the conservati­on organisati­on who have assessed the risks and potential impacts of deep seabed mining warn it could include the disruption of entire ecosystems that are home to largely unstudied wildlife.

The process could also create large plumes of sediments that smother areas far away from the mining sites themselves and kill marine life.

There are also concerns about the release of toxic and heavy metals and the spread of toxins to areas of the oceans that are important for fisheries.

Mining could also lead to the loss of microbes that capture methane and carbon and disrupt the oceans “biological pump” which takes carbon from the atmosphere and transports energy and nutrients through the oceans, they warn.

Sir David, a vice-president of FFI, warned: “Mining the deep sea could create a devastatin­g series of impacts that threaten the processes that are critical to the health and function of our oceans.

“Fauna & Flora Internatio­nal is calling on global government­s to put in place a moratorium on all deep sea mining – a call I wholeheart­edly support.”

In a foreword to the report, he also said the idea that people should be considerin­g the destructio­n of deep sea places before they have understood them or the role they play in the health of the planet “is beyond reason”.

“The rush to mine this pristine and unexplored environmen­t risks creating terrible impacts that cannot be reversed.”

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