Zürcher Nachrichten - 'Significant declines' in some species after deep-sea mining: research

EUR -
AED 4.313393
AFN 81.129971
ALL 98.000268
AMD 450.91819
ANG 2.101746
AOA 1076.885868
ARS 1474.349145
AUD 1.793323
AWG 2.116779
AZN 1.996831
BAM 1.962815
BBD 2.371175
BDT 142.976759
BGN 1.953361
BHD 0.442718
BIF 3449.087484
BMD 1.174357
BND 1.505481
BOB 8.115004
BRL 6.540117
BSD 1.174397
BTN 101.413467
BWP 16.370511
BYN 3.843337
BYR 23017.403706
BZD 2.359032
CAD 1.598447
CDF 3389.195136
CHF 0.931406
CLF 0.029154
CLP 1118.786468
CNY 8.427181
CNH 8.420007
COP 4783.263105
CRC 592.317031
CUC 1.174357
CUP 31.120469
CVE 110.657208
CZK 24.613594
DJF 208.706971
DKK 7.465278
DOP 70.883348
DZD 152.372675
EGP 57.630058
ERN 17.61536
ETB 162.921707
FJD 2.636669
FKP 0.870122
GBP 0.868572
GEL 3.182684
GGP 0.870122
GHS 12.242757
GIP 0.870122
GMD 83.972707
GNF 10189.113773
GTQ 9.013215
GYD 245.698163
HKD 9.218629
HNL 30.735855
HRK 7.533033
HTG 154.110816
HUF 398.955047
IDR 19102.918412
ILS 3.934038
IMP 0.870122
INR 101.407519
IQD 1538.39847
IRR 49455.124433
ISK 142.414016
JEP 0.870122
JMD 188.323095
JOD 0.832612
JPY 172.144932
KES 151.726929
KGS 102.697477
KHR 4706.822902
KMF 495.578367
KPW 1056.958009
KRW 1621.946011
KWD 0.35832
KYD 0.978698
KZT 626.609598
LAK 25327.524429
LBP 105224.889781
LKR 354.248597
LRD 235.461576
LSL 20.674393
LTL 3.467571
LVL 0.710357
LYD 6.362551
MAD 10.5802
MDL 19.917187
MGA 5198.580518
MKD 61.778966
MMK 2464.920876
MNT 4215.09541
MOP 9.49584
MRU 46.611597
MUR 53.421477
MVR 18.079358
MWK 2036.378326
MXN 21.898887
MYR 4.969295
MZN 75.111132
NAD 20.674393
NGN 1797.377536
NIO 43.213163
NOK 11.836218
NPR 162.261949
NZD 1.958388
OMR 0.451539
PAB 1.174397
PEN 4.181521
PGK 4.936497
PHP 66.784554
PKR 334.663213
PLN 4.250727
PYG 8930.65335
QAR 4.281676
RON 5.069
RSD 117.151532
RUB 92.190611
RWF 1697.567364
SAR 4.405364
SBD 9.729662
SCR 16.598934
SDG 705.201506
SEK 11.177004
SGD 1.501422
SHP 0.92286
SLE 27.010422
SLL 24625.690707
SOS 671.198967
SRD 43.020819
STD 24306.825753
STN 24.587881
SVC 10.27542
SYP 15268.827062
SZL 20.680917
THB 37.778825
TJS 11.274095
TMT 4.121994
TND 3.439293
TOP 2.750461
TRY 47.463062
TTD 7.975506
TWD 34.521338
TZS 3065.073334
UAH 49.057979
UGX 4214.061698
USD 1.174357
UYU 47.419484
UZS 14800.900673
VES 137.358704
VND 30703.572444
VUV 139.476948
WST 3.095763
XAF 658.3099
XAG 0.029976
XAU 0.000343
XCD 3.173759
XCG 2.116565
XDR 0.819535
XOF 658.29021
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.961661
ZAR 20.670392
ZMK 10570.61886
ZMW 27.158067
ZWL 378.142582
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

'Significant declines' in some species after deep-sea mining: research
'Significant declines' in some species after deep-sea mining: research / Photo: William WEST - AFP

'Significant declines' in some species after deep-sea mining: research

Deep-sea mining could impact marine life stretching from the tiniest bottom dwellers to apex predators like swordfish and sharks, a major piece of industry-funded research found Thursday.

Text size:

The Metals Company -- a leading deep-sea mining firm -- paid Australia's government science agency to pore through data collected during test mining in the remote Pacific Ocean.

Huge tracts of Pacific Ocean seabed are carpeted in polymetallic nodules, bulbous lumps of rock that are rich in metals used in battery production -- such as cobalt and nickel.

The Metals Company is pushing to be the first to mine these nodules in international waters, striving to exploit a remote expanse known as the Clarion-Clipperton Zone.

Australia's government science agency released a series of technical reports on Thursday detailing how mining could be managed.

Bottom-dwellers such as sea cucumbers, marine worms, starfish and crustaceans could see "significant declines in abundance immediately following mining", research found.

Some of these species would partially bounce back within a year, but filter feeders and other tiny organisms that feast on seabed sediments showed "minimal recovery".

"On the seafloor, our research shows that there are substantial local impacts from different mining operations," scientist Piers Dunstan said during a briefing.

Deep-sea mining companies are still figuring out the best way to retrieve nodules that can lie five kilometres (three miles) or more beneath the waves.

Most efforts focus on robotic harvesting machines, or crawlers, which hoover up nodules as they rove the ocean floor.

The Australian scientists looked at how sharks and fish might be harmed by plumes of sediment discharged as mining waste.

In some scenarios, apex predators could see toxic metals start to build up in their blood after prolonged exposure to these plumes.

"Long-lived top predators, such as swordfish and large sharks, accumulated the highest simulated metal concentrations," scientists noted in one report.

- 'Risk of harm' -

Simulations showed blood metal concentrations would not exceed international health guidelines, and impacts were less pronounced if sediment was discharged at a greater depth.

"This project helps ensure that if deep-sea mining were to go ahead, there is a clear approach to understand potential risks and impacts to marine life and ecosystems," Dunstan said.

Canada-based The Metals Company is striving to start industrial deep-sea mining in the Clarion-Clipperton Zone within the next two years.

The International Seabed Authority -- which oversees deep-sea mining in international waters -- has yet to adopt long-awaited rules governing the industry.

The Metals Company has indicated it could forge ahead even without the authority's approval, pointing to an obscure US law that says American citizens can recover seabed minerals in areas beyond the nation's jurisdiction.

The firm paid Australia's Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation -- or CSIRO -- around US$1 million to compile the reports.

CSIRO stressed it was not for, or against, deep-sea mining -- but that its work would help to measure and monitor impacts should it go ahead.

Energy transition expert Tina Soliman-Hunter said it was one of the "most comprehensive" pieces of research on deep-sea mining to date.

"Without such research, there is a risk of harm from mining activities that can persist for generations," said Soliman-Hunter, from Australia's Macquarie University.

Found in international waters between Mexico and Hawaii, the Clarion-Clipperton Zone is a vast abyssal plain spanning some 4 million square kilometres (1.7 million square miles).

Ch.Siegenthaler--NZN