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Deep sea mining is the latest ocean climate catastrophe

by simon

Deep sea mining is an ocean climate catastrophe because of the release of thousands of years of ecosystem-disrupting chemicals into the oceans. Would you be surprised if I told you, that it’s the lack of animals that makes the deep sea bed critical for biodiversity? Let me explain why.

First, let’s keep the science and risks of deep sea mining simple. It can take 1,000 years for animals to remove and safely store one centimetre of chemical-laden silt on the seabed. The proposed scale of deep sea mining could see fifty per cent of ocean bed disturbed to a depth of five centimetres. Even if we restore animal populations, it could take tens of thousands of years for wildlife to restabilise these critical habitats. Meanwhile, energy released into the ocean, will cause havoc with food chains. This puts pay to any benefits we might see from our efforts for nature-based solutions.

Ocean deserts have critical biodiversity

When we think about the deep sea, we imagine chimneys spewing smoke from the belly of the Earth. These structures are islands for animals that behave the way wildlife first evolved on Earth. The Golden-haired Snail is a relic of those times. Its shell is imbued with iron and it absorbs food energy from the bacteria that live inside its body. It even lacks mouthparts.

Golden-haired Snail, Drawing by Simon Mustoe. Deep sea mining is the latest ocean climate catastrophe to affect this critical habitat.
The Golden-haired Snail is a remarkable animal. It has no mouthparts and is fed by bacteria. They live inside its body and draw sustenance from sulphur that vents from hot smokers. Life as we know it, might have begun in the deep sea, so perhaps we should question actions we might take that would put an end to it.

The comparatively barren landscapes between these outposts are likened to desert. It’s a good analogy. In parts of the Atlantic, the sediment is a kilometre thick. The world’s tallest sand dunes in Argentina are of similar stature.

Here’s where our use of the term biodiversity becomes a problem. For decades now, we have been confusing it with species richness. Just because habitats aren’t overflowing with animal life, doesn’t mean they aren’t important. Biodiversity is the value that animals bring to our survival on Earth and can’t be discounted that way. Take a river for example. Silt is deposited on the outside of a bend where water slows down. This substrate has fewer animals but you wouldn’t disregard it. This is the process that creates fertile floodplains and maintains the balance between soil carbon and atmospheric carbon.

By ignoring the importance of the seabed, we’re disregarding the enormous role it plays in planetary ocean-climate linked processes.

Successful animals don’t disturb the deep sea climate

If anything, the lack of heavy, lumbering animals is an indication of an ecosystems’ over-riding fragility. Tropical rainforests are species rich, which makes them comparatively resilient, despite hosting many large animals. Whereas any species that changes a less diverse landscape too much, risks extinction, as there are fewer other animals to take up the slack. This is why humans can’t manage ecosystems without a planet-wide abundance and diversity of animals. It doesn’t mean animals have to be densely distributed everywhere.

We’re about to place 25-tonne robotic vacuum cleaners into this landscape.

Light-footed deep sea animals have minimal effect. They maintain surface integrity like the security cordons for a museum’s priceless artworks. Their lack of abundance, if anything, is key to their success, because when it comes to ecosystems, less is more. The seabed is the ultimate example of an ecosystem we have to yield to, to survive.

The latest ocean climate catastrophe

Deep sea mining is the latest ocean climate catastrophe because the release of energy locked safely in sediment for thousands of years will irreversibly disrupt global ecosystems. It will change the way ocean systems work and this effect will leak into our atmosphere, affecting our survival on Earth.

Since we are going to immediately destroy something it will take thousands of years for animals to recover, there is no way mining companies can ever successfully mitigate or restore the damage done.

Deep sea mining is possibly one of the biggest threats we have ever faced and it’s happening now. Follow these links to find out what you can do about it.


Spotlight

Deep sea mining is the latest ocean climate catastrophe

Sign the Petition

A few countries have agreed full or partial bans, and leading scientists just appealed for a freeze on deep sea mining contracts. Let’s amplify their message with a million-strong call, take out newspaper ads to hand deliver to each delegate, then publish their names and their responses. Add your voice and share this widely.


Are you a business?

Commercial deep-sea mining is a new threat that looms for our already imperiled ocean. If allowed to go ahead, mining would irreversibly destroy ancient deep-sea habitats. Add your voice here to companies such as BMW, Google, Samsung and Volvo Group.

Deep sea mining is the latest ocean climate catastrophe

Are you a marine scientist?

Please join other marine researchers calling for a pause to deep-sea mining until sufficient and robust scientific information has been obtained to make informed decisions about whether to go ahead. Sign here


No Deep Seabed Mining – WWF

There is widespread concern in the scientific community about deep seabed mining (DSM) and the irreversible impact it would have on delicately balanced deep ocean ecosystems. Read more …


Greenpeace: Busting the deep sea mining industry greenwash

Deep at the bottom of the ocean lies an ecological realm so inaccessible that scientists have only just begun to explore and understand it. Read more …

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