MAC: Mines and Communities

David Attenborough calls for total ban on deep sea mining

Published by MAC on 2020-03-16
Source: The Guardian (UK)

One of the world's most outstanding scientific minds - one respected among all sections of the population - has marshalled his forces to call for a total ban on all deepsea mining.

The report for which he provides the introduction can be downloaded at: https://cms.fauna-flora.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/FFI_2020_The-risks-impacts-deep-seabed-mining_Report.pdf

David Attenborough calls for ban on 'devastating' deep sea mining

Proposed mining of seabed could destroy unstudied ecosystems and disrupt
vital carbon-storing functions, says naturalist

Karen McVeigh

The Guardian

12 March 2020

Sir David Attenborough has urged governments to ban deep sea mining,
following a study warning of “potentially disastrous” risks to the
ocean’s life-support systems if it goes ahead.

The study, by Fauna and Flora International (FFI), warns proposed plans
to mine the seabed could cause significant loss of biodiversity,
disruption of the ocean’s “biological pump”, and the loss of microbes
important for storing carbon. The process, requiring machines operating
thousands of metres under the sea, could also create plumes of sediment
that smother areas far from the mining sites and kill wildlife.

Dozens of exploratory licences, two of which are sponsored by the UK,
have already been granted for huge tracts of the sea bed, ahead of a
race to mine commercially for ores and minerals such as copper, used in
mobile phones and batteries. But the rules to govern the responsible
exploitation of this global resource are not finalised – they are
expected to be completed at a meeting in July at the UN International
Seabed Authority.

Attenborough, the vice president of FFI, said deep sea mining could
create a “devastating series of impacts” threatening processes critical
to the health and function of the oceans, and called on governments to
be guided by scientists.

“Fauna & Flora International is calling on global governments to put in
place a moratorium on all deep sea mining – a call I wholeheartedly
support,” Attenborough said.

In a foreword to the report, Attenborough said it was “beyond reason”
for countries to consider the destruction of deep sea places before they
have understood them or the role they play in the health of the planet.

Attenborough said: “The rush to mine this pristine and unexplored
environment risks creating terrible impacts that cannot be reversed. We
need to be guided by science when faced with decisions of such great
environmental consequence.”

FFI warned that human activity was already putting a huge strain on the
oceans, which have absorbed a third of our carbon emissions and 93% of
the extra heat trapped by the rising concentration of greenhouse gases.

Oceans are becoming more acidic because of the carbon dioxide dissolving
into them, fisheries are under pressure as a result of over-exploitation
and there are hundreds of huge “dead zones”, it said.

Pippa Howard, director at FFI and lead author of the report, called for
a moratorium on deep sea mining. She said: “The conclusions we have come
to after extensive study could hardly be more troubling.

“From methane release to disruption of the ocean’s life-support systems
and the destruction of unstudied ecosystems, the risks of deep sea
mining are numerous and potentially disastrous.”

Louise Casson, of Greenpeace’s Protect the Oceans campaign, said the UK
government’s holding of exploration contracts for deep sea mining was at
odds with its position as a “global ocean champion”.

Casson said: “The UK government now has a choice to make: listen to
industry and press ahead with this dangerous new practice, or listen to
scientific warnings, public concern and the creator of Blue Planet
himself and ban deep sea mining.”

A government spokesman said: “The UK continues to press for the highest
international environmental standards, including on deep sea mineral
extraction.

“While we have sponsored two exploration licences, these allow only for
marine research to understand the effects of deep sea mining.

“We will not issue a single exploitation licence without a full
assessment of the environmental impact.”

 

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