The Prague Post - Trump a boon for deep-sea mining: industry boss

EUR -
AED 4.29936
AFN 72.582645
ALL 95.410717
AMD 434.785711
ANG 2.095399
AOA 1074.692681
ARS 1658.302981
AUD 1.631657
AWG 2.110168
AZN 1.989587
BAM 1.953921
BBD 2.363568
BDT 144.371202
BGN 1.952829
BHD 0.441655
BIF 3487.706503
BMD 1.170689
BND 1.494089
BOB 8.109273
BRL 5.834253
BSD 1.173502
BTN 110.474206
BWP 15.800147
BYN 3.295688
BYR 22945.514183
BZD 2.362609
CAD 1.596177
CDF 2721.853268
CHF 0.921915
CLF 0.026621
CLP 1047.72052
CNY 7.987791
CNH 7.998976
COP 4242.110469
CRC 533.189669
CUC 1.170689
CUP 31.023272
CVE 110.160033
CZK 24.3576
DJF 208.974447
DKK 7.472505
DOP 69.763228
DZD 155.117502
EGP 61.542094
ERN 17.560342
ETB 183.235168
FJD 2.571361
FKP 0.867326
GBP 0.865941
GEL 3.143328
GGP 0.867326
GHS 13.019594
GIP 0.867326
GMD 85.460037
GNF 10299.186338
GTQ 8.97149
GYD 245.516058
HKD 9.17206
HNL 31.187549
HRK 7.53385
HTG 153.644911
HUF 364.560324
IDR 20189.125757
ILS 3.493314
IMP 0.867326
INR 110.619971
IQD 1537.328578
IRR 1539456.691086
ISK 143.409305
JEP 0.867326
JMD 185.255851
JOD 0.830041
JPY 186.337506
KES 151.194722
KGS 102.354206
KHR 4696.524879
KMF 491.689706
KPW 1053.620543
KRW 1724.209067
KWD 0.36035
KYD 0.977964
KZT 537.635414
LAK 25715.716237
LBP 104566.906572
LKR 373.477319
LRD 215.335735
LSL 19.339937
LTL 3.456742
LVL 0.708138
LYD 7.444034
MAD 10.843867
MDL 20.313817
MGA 4877.41501
MKD 61.627339
MMK 2458.357802
MNT 4186.960132
MOP 9.473033
MRU 46.858151
MUR 54.764822
MVR 18.098345
MWK 2034.887114
MXN 20.363205
MYR 4.626567
MZN 74.807242
NAD 19.339689
NGN 1592.360354
NIO 43.188847
NOK 10.899825
NPR 176.758329
NZD 1.985589
OMR 0.450124
PAB 1.173482
PEN 4.091966
PGK 5.096144
PHP 71.520887
PKR 327.091316
PLN 4.250182
PYG 7393.018654
QAR 4.289713
RON 5.091336
RSD 117.390953
RUB 87.655034
RWF 1719.783326
SAR 4.390929
SBD 9.422392
SCR 16.781822
SDG 702.990133
SEK 10.828222
SGD 1.493279
SHP 0.874038
SLE 28.801112
SLL 24548.768964
SOS 670.66954
SRD 43.742826
STD 24230.909019
STN 24.476677
SVC 10.268172
SYP 129.390435
SZL 19.323917
THB 38.035308
TJS 11.022244
TMT 4.103267
TND 3.414047
TOP 2.81874
TRY 52.743036
TTD 7.968407
TWD 36.934115
TZS 3049.790172
UAH 51.755048
UGX 4365.839974
USD 1.170689
UYU 46.675724
UZS 14168.438976
VES 566.537003
VND 30845.912268
VUV 138.363261
WST 3.194234
XAF 655.34095
XAG 0.015896
XAU 0.000252
XCD 3.163847
XCG 2.114976
XDR 0.815034
XOF 655.343746
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.290871
ZAR 19.41489
ZMK 10537.60725
ZMW 22.204196
ZWL 376.961541
  • BCC

    -0.2900

    83.86

    -0.35%

  • CMSC

    -0.0900

    22.86

    -0.39%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    64

    0%

  • GSK

    -0.2200

    54.22

    -0.41%

  • AZN

    -2.2400

    187.51

    -1.19%

  • NGG

    -0.1900

    87.23

    -0.22%

  • BP

    -0.2800

    45.97

    -0.61%

  • BCE

    -0.3200

    23.56

    -1.36%

  • JRI

    -0.0600

    12.83

    -0.47%

  • BTI

    -0.7700

    57.32

    -1.34%

  • RIO

    0.3400

    99.95

    +0.34%

  • CMSD

    -0.0600

    23.26

    -0.26%

  • RELX

    -0.1400

    36.39

    -0.38%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    15.4

    +0.65%

  • VOD

    -0.1200

    15.51

    -0.77%

Trump a boon for deep-sea mining: industry boss
Trump a boon for deep-sea mining: industry boss / Photo: William WEST - AFP

Trump a boon for deep-sea mining: industry boss

A leading deep-sea mining company in the paradisal Cook Islands is aiming to start commercial production by 2030, spurred on by Donald Trump's recent backing for the much-maligned industry.

Text size:

Moana Minerals wants to mine a swathe of deep ocean in the South Pacific nation for polymetallic nodules, golf-ball sized lumps studded with metals like cobalt, nickel and manganese.

Efforts to start commercial-scale production have been dogged by growing calls to ban the industry until its environmental impact is clear.

But Moana Minerals boss Hans Smit said fresh momentum was building, citing the support of US President Trump.

Trump earlier this year signed an executive order targeted at "unleashing" mineral resources found in the deep ocean.

"What he's done is tasked his people to go and look at it seriously," Smit said.

"It certainly is helpful that we are engaging with a lot of people that in the past would not give us the time of day. But they are listening."

Both the United States and China have signalled renewed interest in deep-sea mining, which could offer a pipeline of critical minerals that helps insulate them from future trade ructions.

Trump is eager to weaken China's stranglehold on the coveted metals, which are used in everything from rechargeable batteries to military technology.

Cook Islands -- which lays claim to one of the world's biggest deposits of polymetallic nodules -- signed a contentious deep-sea mining cooperation deal with China earlier this year.

US-based Smit had a simple message for those worried about China's foray into the industry.

"The people yelling at the Cook Islands for talking to the Chinese, I have a very simple statement for them: If you want to counter the Chinese, get off your arse and do something proactive."

Cook Islands' Pacific neighbour Kiribati is also exploring a deep-sea mining deal with China.

China already holds some of the world's largest deposits of critical minerals and is fiercely protective of its position.

Smit said he hoped to start industrial-scale deep-sea mining by the end of the decade.

"I want to be mining before 2030. Yeah, absolutely, I think that we can."

- Frustration -

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

Canada-based The Metals Company has indicated it could forge ahead and start mining international waters without the authority's approval, applying instead for a mining permit under obscure and untested US laws.

Those laws say US citizens can mine the ocean, as long as their activities lie outside the nation's maritime territory.

"I can understand why The Metals Company have done it," Smit said.

"I can understand their frustration and empathise with it.

"But I still think there's a lot to be unpacked before we're going to have any clarity as to which way it's going to go."

The Cook Islands government, which is supportive of deep-sea mining, said it would not set a time frame on when it hoped to have the industry under way.

But the government said it remained "aligned" with the International Seabed Authority's approach.

"Cook Islands will remain steadfast in our precautionary approach," government spokesman Edward Herman told AFP.

"We believe that the Cook Islands government and the people can make an informed decision."

M.Soucek--TPP