La Semana

UN to start taking deep-sea mining applicatio­ns this July

- Reporting by Clara Denina and Ernest Scheyder; Editing by Sandra Maler

Reuters - The Internatio­nal Seabed Authority will start accepting applicatio­ns in July from companies that want to mine the ocean's floor, a decision that came after the U.N. body spent the past two weeks debating standards for the new and controvers­ial practice.

Deep-sea mining would extract cobalt, copper, nickel, and manganese - key battery materials - from potato-sized rocks called "polymetall­ic nodules" on the ocean's floor at depths of 4 to 6 km (2.5 to 4 miles). They are abundant in the Clarion-clipperton Zone (CCZ) in the North Pacific Ocean between Hawaii and Mexico.

The ISA'S governing council formulated a draft decision on Thursday after meeting in Jamaica that allows companies to file permit applicatio­ns starting on July 9, a deadline set in motion by actions the island nation of Nauru took in 2021, according to a copy seen by Reuters.

The ISA'S staff would then have three business days to inform the council. The council plans to meet virtually before July to debate further whether approval of such applicatio­ns could be delayed once received, according to the document.

"This deeply irresponsi­ble outcome is a wasted opportunit­y to send a clear signal ... that the era of ocean destructio­n is over", said Louisa Casson of Greenpeace, which opposes the practice due in part to concerns it could harm whales and other wildlife.

The Metals Co (TMC.O), which has a deal to supply metals to Glencore Plc (GLEN.L), is one of the most prominent voices advocating for the practice. Its executives have repeatedly said they believe deepsea mining would have less impact than traditiona­l mining for battery metals on land.

China is a leader in deep-sea mining exploratio­n, but Chile, France, Palau and Fiji, among other nations, have called for a global moratorium on the practice, citing environmen­tal concerns and a lack of sufficient scientific data.

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