Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Norway to open Arctic seafloor for mineral exploratio­n

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COPENHAGEN, Denmark — Norway’s minority centerleft government and two large opposition parties made a deal Tuesday to open the Arctic Ocean to seabed mineral exploratio­n despite warnings by environmen­tal groups that it would threaten the biodiversi­ty of the vulnerable ecosystems in the area.

Norway said in June it wanted to open parts of the Norwegian continenta­l shelf for commercial deep sea mining in line with the country’s strategy to seek new economic opportunit­ies and reduce its reliance on oil and gas.

The head of Greenpeace Norway, Frode Pleym, said the decision was “a disaster for the sea” and the mining would take place in “our last wilderness.”

“We do not know what consequenc­es this will have for the ecosystems in the sea, for endangered species such as whales and seabirds, or for the fish stocks on which we base our livelihood,” he said.

Martin Sveinssonn Melvaer of the Norwegian Bellona environmen­tal group said the move was “completely contrary to scientific recommenda­tions” and believed it was “a dangerous derailment in the fight against climate change to open up seabed minerals.”

The government — made up of the Labor and the Center

Party — made the deal with the conservati­ves from Hoeyre and the Progress Party, Norwegian news agency NTB said.

It said they had agreed on a step-by-step opening process where the Norwegian parliament, or Stortinget, will approve the first developmen­t projects, in the same way as it has done for certain extraction projects in the petroleum sector.

Terje Aasland, Norway’s minister for petroleum and energy, told Norwegian public broadcaste­r NRK that “we will do this carefully, we will do it step by step. We will collect knowledge, then we will assess whether it is possible to start with this extraction.”

The Scandinavi­an country, which is one of the world’s wealthiest countries because of its vast oil and gas reserves, says there are significan­t mineral resources on the seabed of the Norwegian continenta­l shelf.

According to the Norwegian Petroleum Directorat­e, there are sulphides and manganese crusts containing metals and minerals that are crucial for making batteries, wind turbines, computers and mobile phones.

If proven to be profitable, and if extraction can be done sustainabl­y, seabed mineral activi- ties can strengthen the economy, including employment in Norway, while ensuring the supply of crucial metals for the world’s transition to sustainabl­e energy, the Ministry of Petroleum and Energy said in June.

The planned area is located southwest of the Arctic island of Svalbard.

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