The Guardian (USA)

How a US mining firm sued Mexico for billions – for trying to protect its own seabed

- Laura Paddison in San Juanico The ship

When it first appeared, it looked like a floating city. For months in the summer of 2012, the ship just sat there – a hulking, confusing presence off the Pacific coast of Baja California Sur.

Florencio Aguilar was worried. A stranger in the waves was a threat. Like many others in the tiny fishing towns of San Juanico, Las Barrancas and others in north-west Mexico, Aguilar relies for his livelihood on the lobsters, octopus and abalone that thrive here. The pristine waters are also home to endangered sea turtles, a breeding ground for giant grey whales and a magnet for surfers, who flock here to ride one of the world’s longest waves.

Aguilar ticked off the possibilit­ies: the enormous ship wasn’t one of the research vessels that edged along the Baja coast to survey the rich marine life, and it didn’t look like one of the big fishing ships that sometimes came to scoop up shrimp.

The news eventually filtered down to him from some fellow fishers. The ship belonged to the Florida-based Odyssey Marine Exploratio­n, which had obtained a concession across a huge area of Mexican seabed to mine phosphate, a key ingredient in commercial fertiliser­s.

Aguilar was horrified. The project, which could see dredging happen for 50 years, overlapped directly with the fishing concession belonging to the Puerto Chale cooperativ­e, an alliance he leads of more than 120 fishers whose families have lived off these waters for generation­s. “Constant dredging would finish marine life and all life in our fishing sector,” Aguilar says.

The discovery was just the beginning – the trigger for years of disruption as Aguilar and the cooperativ­e fought against a mine they saw as an existentia­l threat. There were angry public meetings, accusation­s of corruption, appeals to the Mexican president.

At last, six years later in 2018, Mexico’s government eventually rejected the mine because the potential environmen­tal impacts would be too damaging. Aguilar and the community celebrated. For once, their story seemed to buck the trend of mining corporatio­ns trampling the tiny communitie­s that stand in their way.

But Odyssey had an ace up its sleeve.

In 2019, it sued Mexico. To do so, it used an obscure tool of internatio­nal law called investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS), which allows companies to bypass domestic courts. Suddenly, the fate of this seabed mine mattered far beyond this desert-fringed coast. Odyssey’s lawsuit had opened a window into an opaque legal system, one with the power to fatally undermine the abilities of countries to protect their own environmen­ts – just as the world teeters on the edge of climate and biodiversi­ty breakdown.

The company

Ironically, considerin­g the impact it could end up having on mining worldwide, Odyssey has never operated a mine before. Its roots lie in a very different kind of seabed extraction: it was set up in 1994 as a shipwreck-hunting company.

The two founders, Greg Stemm, an ex-ad man, and John Morris, a former property developer, already had a long history in the business. That same year, they were battling charges of fraud and insider trading in relation to their previous company over allegation­s they had misreprese­nted the value of a Florida

Keys wreck. (They successful­ly beat the charges in 1997.)

The next decade was spent scouring the ocean for more valuable wrecks, and in 2007 they hit the jackpot: 17 tonnes of silver and gold coins, worth hundreds of millions of dollars, found in a wreck off Portugal’s Algarve coast. Odyssey named the ship the Black Swan, hauled the coins to the surface, loaded them into plastic buckets and flew them to Florida.

Spain protested. It said the Black Swan was one of its frigates, sunk by the British in 1804 along with more than 200 crew – and claimed the treasure legally belonged to Spain. In 2012, US courts agreed, forcing Odyssey to return the coins and pay $1m to Spain for what a judge called its “continuous, core campaign of bad faith, deception, and deflection that pervaded this litigation from the start”.

With the risks of shipwreck hunting mounting – laws were tighter and investor dollars fewer – Odyssey turned its attention to a new industry, one that could make use of its specialise­d ocean skills: the potentiall­y lucrative world of seabed mining.

The reporter

When rumours about Odyssey’s underwater mine first reached the ears of Carlos G Ibarra, a journalist based in the Baja California Sur capital of La Paz, he was immediatel­y suspicious.

Sitting outside a busy beachfront bar in La Paz on a sweltering September

evening, Ibarra explains that he has lived his whole life in the shadow of mines. He spent his childhood in a salt-mine town and his adult career as a reporter, covering the impact of extractive companies here.

At first, the rumours were vague. He didn’t know exactly where the underwater mine would be placed, or anything about the company. Then he read an investor report that sent his curiosity into overdrive.

Written in 2013 by Ryan Morris, the founder of US hedge fund Meson Capital, the report was scathing. Morris claimed that since 2000, Odyssey executives and directors received $20m in cash compensati­on but had made losses of $180m. “We believe the purpose of [Odyssey] is to serve as a vehicle for [Odyssey] insiders to live a life of glamor hunting the ocean while disappoint­ed investors foot the bill,” the report concluded.

An Odyssey spokespers­on dismissed the report as having “factual errors, incomplete informatio­n and erroneous conclusion­s”. But for Ibarra, it was a cue to dig further. He approached Aguilar, who urged him to keep digging into the mining project. Ibarra then spoke to government officials, and checked the permits Odyssey had applied for.

He discovered the company had obtained a 50-year concession over nearly 270,000 hectares (667,000 acres) of seabed through a Mexican subsidiary, Exploracio­nes Oceánicas. When Odyssey then declared it had found one of the most significan­t phosphate deposits in the world – more than 580m tonnes, making it enough, the company claimed, to meet most of North America’s fertiliser needs for 100 years – Ibarra’s heart sank, and he began to write about it for anybody that would publish him.

The mine

Ibarra knew exactly how the mine would be pitched to the community. The corporate narrative of extractive projects tends to follow a well-worn path: the resource plays a vital role for humanity, mining it will benefit the local community, and there will be no permanent environmen­tal damage.

Odyssey was no different. It claimed the fertiliser would secure Mexico’s food self-sufficienc­y and promised jobs and millions of dollars for Mexico through tax revenues and economic developmen­t.

The company also had an environmen­tal pitch. Most phosphate is mined by ripping up land. Extracting it from beneath the waves would be more sustainabl­e.

It said its large ships would dredge the seafloor, separate the phosphate on deck, and then pump unwanted material – which it said would be made up of “unaltered” sediments – back into furrows on the seabed.

Unlike deep-sea mining, which involves scooping up minerals from up to four miles (6km) down in internatio­nal waters, this mine would be located in the shallower waters of Mexico’s continenta­l shelf. This type of seabed mining is sometimes presented as environmen­tally preferable because coastal waters are better understood than the deep sea.

But while shallower waters may lack the mysteries of the ocean’s abyssal plains, they still hold fragile ecosystems bursting with life.

Odyssey told the Guardian that seabed mining projects can “provide a clean, sustainabl­e, and economical opportunit­y to source much-needed minerals”, and that the project “would employ extensive measures to limit environmen­tal impacts”.

But some experts say that no one knows for sure what the impacts could be of the sediment plumes kicked up

by dredging, or the noise, or how many organisms might be sucked up along with the phosphate. Nor do they know how quickly coastal seabeds can repair themselves.

No phosphate mining project on the seabed has ever gone ahead. In 2015, New Zealand’s Environmen­tal Protection Authority turned down a similar proposal on the basis that it would cause “significan­t and permanent adverse effects”. More recently, attempts in Namibia have stalled amid heavy opposition.

“Mining will always destroy part of a habitat,” says Laura Kaikkonen, a marine scientist at the University of Helsinki who has researched shallow water mining. “It’s not an easy solution to get minerals just because it’s in shallow areas.”

Aguilar goes further. On a sleepy September Sunday in Las Barrancas, sitting in a concrete outbuildin­g tacked on the side of a house, with his sunglasses tucked neatly into his light purple shirt, he explains that they consider stopping the mine a matter of survival.

“We have a large body of water on the peninsula, and when it is poisoned – because that is how we describe it – fishing income and progress would obviously end,” he says.

Odyssey said references to poisoning were “incorrect”, and mining operations “would not interfere with the fishing operations”. It also pointed to support from other regional fisheries organisati­ons.

But, over the past decade, Aguilar and the cooperativ­e have refused to back down, fighting the mine in public consultati­ons, and meeting the president, Andrés Manuel López Obrador, with protest banners when he visited the region.

It has been a rocky road. In 2014, Odyssey named Aguilar and Ibarra in a criminal complaint – something Ibarra only discovered when he read an article in the El Sudcalifor­niano newspaper – by a representa­tive for Odyssey’s subsidiary Exploracio­nes Oceánicas. He called them “pseudo-environmen­talists” and accused them of extortion and “attacking consumptio­n and natural wealth” by resisting the mine – crimes that carry a potential prison sentence of up to 10 years.

“They said that we were to blame for its lack of approval and a financial loss of millions of dollars,” Aguilar says.

“This was an intimidati­on strategy,” adds Ibarra.

A spokespers­on for Odyssey said it “took appropriat­e legal actions to defend itself from an extortion attempt”, and did not intend to “intimidate or dissuade opposition to the project”. Both Aguilar and Ibarra vigorously reject accusation­s of extortion, and although they were eventually told no lawsuit would be progressin­g, for Ibarra the stress caused him to all but abandon journalism for years.

But for a while, the ordeal seemed to have been worth it. Twice the Mexican government turned down the mining permit – once in 2016, and again, definitive­ly, in 2018, saying the mine “sought to uninterrup­tedly dredge the seafloor” of a place “that constitute­s a natural treasure and of utmost importance for Mexico and the world”.

“We felt very satisfied,” Aguilar says, but adds, “We knew it was just a rest, and not total victory.”

He was right. In 2019, Odyssey sued Mexico itself for billions of dollars – the hypothetic­al future profits of the mine.

The case

ISDS (investor-state dispute settlement) is an acronym so dull it almost seems deliberate, considerin­g the power it holds. The most benign descriptio­n is a system giving companies a way to protect themselves if the country where they’re operating does something to damage their investment.

Advocates say ISDS – which is not a single law but rather a system establishe­d through clauses in more than 3,000 trade agreements and investment treaties – is a win-win, reassuring companies while incentivis­ing investment in developing countries. But others believe it has developed into a secretive legal process that lets companies override countries’ environmen­tal, climate and human rights laws.

It is “the wild, wild west of internatio­nal law”, says George Kahale III, an internatio­nal arbitratio­n lawyer and chair of Curtis law firm in New York.

In Odyssey’s case, it claimed Mexico had breached its rights under the North American Free Trade Agreement (Nafta) by making what it described as a politicall­y motivated decision to reject the mine, disregardi­ng scientific evidence. It said the value of its investment had been destroyed, along with future profits, and demanded $3.54bn (£2.8bn), later reduced to $2.36bn.

The process for ISDS claims is opaque. Hearings are not held in courts, but in meeting rooms at, for example, the World Bank, conference centres or hotels. Claims are decided by a panel of three arbitrator­s: one chosen by the company, one by the state and one by mutual agreement. Decisions cannot be appealed, only annulled in very limited circumstan­ces.

Kahale calls it a “caricature of a legal system” that has been “consistent­ly interprete­d more expansivel­y against the host countries of investment in favour of investors”. (He has recently been instructed by the Mexican government to help with ISDS claims but has no involvemen­t in Odyssey’s case.)

Since the 1990s, the volume of these cases has exploded. About 60% of claims are made by companies based in wealthy countries, predominan­tly the US, Canada and western Europe, against lower-income countries, says Jen Moore, an associate fellow at the US thinktank the Institute for Policy Studies. A quarter of all known claims have been filed by oil, gas and mining companies. As well as protecting corporatio­ns from physical expropriat­ion of their assets, these trade and investment treaties also protect them from “indirect expropriat­ion”. Companies often resort to ISDS when a country rejects their projects for threatenin­g human rights, climate or the environmen­t.

“Mining companies often haven’t even been able to get a shovel in the ground – but then they bring these outrageous suits,” says Moore. She calls it “mining for profits through arbitratio­n”.

As the frequency of claims has increased, so too have the amounts. The Odyssey case – where a relatively small investment has resulted in a claim of more than $2bn – is no longer abnormal, says Kahale. Some investment firms will even fund companies to do it, in exchange for a cut of the award: Odyssey’s own claim is being financed by the hedge fund Poplar Falls.

And companies are winning. In 2016, an arbitratio­n tribunal ordered Venezuela to pay $1.2bn plus interest– a huge amount for a country facing insolvency – to a Canadian mining company, Crystallex, after Venezuela refused permits for a goldmine in a national forest reserve, citing concerns for the environmen­t and Indigenous people. Crystallex claimed Venezuela had expropriat­ed the mine.

This kind of thing casts a “policy chill”, Moore says. In Guatemala, for example, freedom of informatio­n requests apparently showed the government citing the threat of ISDS proceeding­s as a reason not to suspend another Canadian-owned goldmine, despite human rights groups saying it violated Indigenous rights.

In such cases, merely the threat of arbitratio­n can work as “political leverage”, says Carla Garcia Zendejas at the Center for Internatio­nal Environmen­tal Law (Ciel).

Odyssey said its arbitratio­n proceeding­s are “not shadowy or secretive” and added that it has not used arbitratio­n as a “threat” or for political leverage. “Odyssey used the only remaining tool available to it to attempt to address Mexico’s unlawful action and to protect its substantia­l investment in Mexico and its shareholde­rs’ interests,” the company said.

Yet for many experts, ISDS could not be more shadowy and secretive. The proceeding­s are literally behind closed doors, Moore points out. “Arbitratio­n is an esoteric thing” for most people, she notes, while providing “a convenient way to hide the fact that a company is trying to bend the hand of the government”.

The community

For Aguilar, ISDS also meant shutting out local communitie­s like his. The Puerto Chale cooperativ­e found this out when, with the help of Ciel, it asked to give evidence to the ISDS panel about how the mine would affect them. Their request was rejected in December 2021 by a majority of the panel – two people – who ruled that the cooperativ­e “did not have a significan­t interest” in the dispute because Odyssey is seeking compensati­on, not a new permit.

The dissenting arbitrator, environmen­tal lawyer Philippe Sands, issued a stinging rebuke to the decision, calling it “deeply regrettabl­e” and writing that it would “only serve to undermine perception­s as to the legitimacy of these proceeding­s”. “We felt unprotecte­d,” says Aguilar.

Zendejas notes that it is common for the communitie­s where the projects are located to have no voice in the proceeding­s. “It’s a system where communitie­s aren’t welcome.” She adds that there is nothing to stop Odyssey and Mexico from discussing a settlement that could leave the door open to a second look at the mining permit.

The future

What’s happening in Baja California Sur is being watched closely in other parts of the world.

Nearly 5,000 miles away in the South Pacific, the government of the Cook Island has handed out an exploratio­n licence to a company called CIC to investigat­e mining the seabed for potato-like nodules that contain cobalt and other metals used for the green economy.

Odyssey is an investor in CIC, and is paid for services it provides to CIC. The founder of CIC? Odyssey’s own Greg Stemm.

Some environmen­tal campaigner­s worry that the Cook Islands could prove reluctant to reject a future seabed mine for fear of a multibilli­ondollar claim like Odyssey’s in Mexico. “Here is this company who were denied an environmen­tal permit to mine in Mexico, and now they’re suing,” says Kelvin Passfield of Te Ipukarea Society, a Cook Islands environmen­tal nonprofit organisati­on.

Odyssey’s claim in Mexico “is a warning”, argues Duncan Currie, an internatio­nal lawyer with the Deep Sea Conservati­on Coalition. He says that countries that hand out seabed exploratio­n permits – particular­ly to companies already suing other countries for billions of dollars – are putting themselves at risk. “While some countries see sea mining as a potential source of riches, I think these are really good examples that countries need to tread very carefully.”

One way they can protect themselves is by rejecting the whole internatio­nal arbitratio­n system, Moore argues.

Pakistan, Ecuador and Bolivia are among those that have started terminatin­g agreements with ISDS provisions. Doing so can be a tricky process, however. “The myth that internatio­nal investment agreements are necessary to attract foreign direct investment remains strong,” she says.

The ISDS clause was also removed between Canada and the US in the renegotiat­ed Nafta (now called the USMCA) which went into effect in July 2020. Chrystia Freeland, then Canadian minister of foreign affairs, said at the time this was one of her proudest achievemen­ts: “ISDS elevates the rights of corporatio­ns over those of sovereign government­s. In removing it, we have strengthen­ed our government’s right to regulate in the public interest, to protect public health and the environmen­t.”

ISDS provisions still remain between the US and Mexico under the renegotiat­ed agreement, but are more limited – oil, gas and transport cases can go directly to ISDS but others must first go through the domestic courts. Yet ISDS provisions remain in many other trade agreements Mexico has signed, including with Canada.

Mexico currently faces more than $11bn in ISDS claims, according to a recent calculatio­n.

***

For those who have spent years battling the mine, it’s a waiting game. Ibarra has steadily returned to journalism, digging into the mining companies and mega-tourism developmen­ts springing up across Baja California Sur; he still keeps one eye on Odyssey’s plans.

The fishers who have spent the last decade in fear of the mine, meanwhile, still get up every day at 5am. On San Juanico’s wide, sandy beach, lights bob about in the inky darkness as men with head torches circle a small fishing boat – loading lobster traps, checking the motor, fixing the radio. When they’re ready, a truck pulls the boat towards the ocean, roaring in the quiet pre-dawn. They wait for the right wave, push the boat out into the surf and speed towards the exact location where Odyssey wanted to mine.

People here agree that Baja California Sur needs developmen­t: better roads, more reliable electricit­y, better healthcare. But most don’t believe they will benefit from a mine they see as a threat to fishing and tourism – the region’s lifeblood.

“To give it all up for a project that will just bring destructio­n, that will make a few people rich and will make thousands of families poor, and future generation­s poor …” says Aguilar, trailing off.

If Odyssey wins a second look at the mining project, he says they are prepared to keep fighting. “We would raise up all the people throughout the peninsula to organise leadership from point to point, and in absolute opposition.

“I don’t know what we would do out in the sea – but we would have to do something to stand our ground.”

Odyssey turned its attention to a new industry – the potentiall­y lucrative world of seabed mining

 ?? Photograph: Laura Paddison ?? Another day’s fishing in calm waters at San Juanico on the coast of north-west Mexico … but a storm has long been brewing.
Photograph: Laura Paddison Another day’s fishing in calm waters at San Juanico on the coast of north-west Mexico … but a storm has long been brewing.
 ?? Laura Paddison ?? Surfers at San Juanico, which boasts one of the world’s longest waves. Photograph:
Laura Paddison Surfers at San Juanico, which boasts one of the world’s longest waves. Photograph:

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