Ferromanganese nodules collected from seamounts in the Pacific Ocean. Credit: US Geological Survey.
North America
Seabed Minerals

First commercial recovery permit for seabed mining on the horizon

The US government has streamlined exploration and exploitation licence applications for seabed mining in international waters. This bypasses the International Seabed Authority (ISA), which has been slow in establishing a governance structure for commercial mineral recovery

The national Oceanic and At­mospheric Administration (NOAA), an agency within the US Department of Com­merce, recently updated regulations regarding seabed mineral exploration and commercial recovery. The updated framework allows US companies not only to apply for a permit to explore for seabed minerals in areas beyond national jurisdiction, but also to com­mercially recover them.

In other words, qualified appli­cants can now submit exploration and commercial recovery information to­gether, and may incorporate environ­mental, geological, and engineering data collected during exploration ac­tivities directly into commercial recov­ery permit applications.

One company responded to that change in regulation immediately. A day after the framework update came into effect, the US subsidiary of The Metals Company (TMC) sub­mitted a consolidated application for an exploration licence and a commer­cial recovery permit for polymetallic nodules in international waters of the Clarion Clipperton Zone (CCZ) in the Pacific Ocean.

The Metals Company has already explored the CCZ thanks to its part­nership with the Pacific Island coun­tries of Nauru and Tonga, holding exploration licences issued by the ISA under UN law. But apart from a pro­duction test, these licences do not al­low commercial production.

And to date, the ISA has not man­aged to come up with an agreed frame­work that offers guidelines on how companies can be awarded a produc­tion licence, much to the frustration of the industry. So, if NOAA grants its first commercial recovery permit to The Metals Company, it could mark the inauguration of commercial sea­bed mining in international waters.

In a 35-page response to these de­velopments, the ISA stated: “Any com­mercial exploitation outside of nation­al jurisdiction carried out without the authorisation of ISA would constitute a violation of international law.”

The CCZ is located between Hawaii and Mexico, and includes the Clarion fracture zone in the north, the Clipperton fracture zone in the south and the adjoining abyssal plain. It is rich in polymetallic nodules, loosely scattered on the seabed, that contain four base metals: cobalt, nickel, copper and manganese, in a single ore.
TMC designed a nodule collection system that creates a suction force to coax
the nodules into the collector without digging or dredging. The sediment is then washed off the nodules and deposited back on the sea floor before the nodules travel 4,200 m up the riser to the production vessel.
Once aboard, nodules are dewatered and residual water, sediment and nodule fines are sent back to a depth of 2,000 m via the return pipe. This is a strategically chosen depth, well below the productive upper ocean layers and bypassing 95 % of marine life. The polymetallic nodules will subsequently be processed onshore, leaving minimal tailings behind because most of the ore can be used.

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