Latest News

Trump will speed up the approval of permits for deep sea mining in international waters

The Trump administration will push ahead with its effort on Wednesday to encourage U.S. deep sea exploration by speeding up?permitting companies that are hunting for vital minerals in international waters. This move is likely to raise environmental and legal concerns.

This effort could 'help?spark?a U.S. led scramble to find resources on the deep seabed, before global standards for the relatively new techniques of mining are in place.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration has finalized a rule that follows an executive order signed by U.S. president Donald Trump. This executive order was intended to bolster the deep-sea?mining?industry in a bid to counter China's control over critical metals.

According to a government press release, the U.S. officials will consolidate licensing and permits into a single, ostensibly faster review.

The Metals Company, a Canadian mining company, began the process of obtaining such exploration licenses and permits last year. This was a step forward in its bid to be the first to receive approval for developing deep-sea minerals.

Some parts of the Pacific Ocean, and elsewhere, are believed to have large amounts of polymetallic nodules, which are potato-shaped rocks filled with building blocks for electric vehicles and electronic devices, such as nickel, cobalt, and copper.

There are still questions about the future of regulation in the industry.

Trump's executive order instructed his administration to speed up mining permits issued under the Deep Oceanbed Hard Minerals Resources Act?of 1980, and to set up a process to issue permits along the U.S. Outer Continental Shelf.

Since years, the International Seabed Authority (created by the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea which the U.S. does not have ratified) has been examining standards for deep-sea mines in international waters. It hasn't formalized the standards because of disagreements over the acceptable levels for dust, noise and any other factors from this practice.

Companies are lining up for U.S. waters to mine.

Supporters of deep-sea mining have argued that the practice will reduce the need for large land-based mining operations, which are not always popular with the host communities. Environmental groups have demanded that the activities be banned because they warn that industrial operations at the ocean's bottom could lead to irreversible biodiversity losses. Trevor Hunnicutt, Thomas Derpinghaus and Trevor Hunnicutt report.

(source: Reuters)