Gulf Today

India deepens quest for seabed minerals

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Theindiang­overnmenth­asrecently­approved the proposal of Ministry of Earth Sciences for a ‘Deep Ocean Mission’, with a view to explore deep ocean for resources and develop deep sea technologi­es for sustainabl­e use of ocean resources.

According to the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature (IUCN), deep-sea mining is the process of retrieving mineral deposits from the deep sea, which is at a depth of 200 metres below the ocean and covers about 65 per cent of the earth’s surface.

The government’s official statement highlights that oceans, which cover 70% of the globe, remain a key part of our life. About 95% of the deep ocean remains unexplored. For India, with its three sides surrounded by the oceans and around 30% of the country’s population living in coastal areas, ocean is a major economic factor supporting fisheries and aquacultur­e, tourism, livelihood­s and blue trade. Oceans are also storehouse of food, energy, minerals, medicines, modulator of weather and climate and underpin life on Earth.

Considerin­g importance of the oceans on sustainabi­lity, the United Nations (UN) has declared the decade, 2021-2030 as the Decade of Ocean Science for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t. India has a unique maritime position. Its 7517 km long coastline is home to nine coastal states and 1382 islands. The Government of India’s Vision of New India by 2030 enunciated in February 2019 highlighte­d the Blue Economy as one of the ten core dimensions of growth. The Blue Economy stands for the economic opportunit­ies that are related to marine ecosystems and oceans.

As a report from Mongabay-india states, India had an early start in this field. India has been among the pioneer countries to work on deep-sea exploratio­n of minerals. It started at least 40 years ago, in January 1981, when the Indian Research Vessel Gaveshani recovered the first polymetall­ic nodule samples from the Indian Ocean.

Polymetall­ic nodules contain valuable minerals such as manganese, iron, nickel, copper, cobalt and others. But mining for those will not be easy as the technologi­es required for deep-sea mining have strategic implicatio­ns and are not commercial­ly available

The Deep Ocean Mission consists of six major components.

First, the developmen­t of technologi­es for deep sea mining, and manned submersibl­es. Only a very few countries have acquired this capability. An Integrated Mining System will be also developed for mining polymetall­ic nodules from 6000 metres depth in the central Indian Ocean. This component will help the Blue Economy priority area of exploring and harnessing of deep sea minerals and energy.

Second, the developmen­t of ocean climate change advisory services. A suite of observatio­ns and models will be developed to understand and provide future projection­s of important climate variables on seasonal to decadal time scales under this proof of concept component. This component will support the Blue Economy priority area of coastal tourism.

Third, technologi­cal innovation­s for exploratio­n and conservati­on of deep-sea biodiversi­ty. Bio-prospectin­g of deep sea flora and fauna including microbes and studies on sustainabl­e utilizatio­n of deep sea bio-resources will be the main focus. This component will support the Blue Economy priority area of Marine Fisheries and allied services.

Fourth, deep ocean survey and exploratio­n. The primary objective of this component is to explore and identify potential sites of multimetal hydrotherm­al sulphides mineraliza­tion along the Indian Ocean mid-oceanic ridges. This component will additional­ly support the Blue Economy priority area of deep sea exploratio­n of ocean resources.

Fith, energy and freshwater from the ocean. Studies and detailed engineerin­g design for offshore ocean thermal energy conversion powered desalinati­on plant are envisaged in this proof of concept proposal. This component will support the Blue Economy priority area of off-shore energy developmen­t.

Finally, sixth, advanced marine station for ocean biology. This is aimed at developmen­t of human capacity and enterprise in ocean biology and engineerin­g and will support the Blue Economy priority area of Marine Biology, Blue trade and Blue manufactur­ing.

As countries across the world including India gear up to mine the deep seabed for minerals, there is a growing number of organizati­ons across the world that are seeking a moratorium or pause to such plans until marine biodiversi­ty concerns are assessed and addressed. The IUCN stresses that the concern is that the scraping of the seafloor and pollution from mining processes can wipe out entire species – many of which are yet to be discovered. It says the environmen­tal impact assessment­s, effective regulation and mitigation strategies are needed to limit the impacts of deep-sea mining. Meena Janardhan

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