Can Recycling and the Circular Economy Render Seafloor Mining Unnecessary?

International Marine Minerals Society
Fernando J. A. S. Barriga
Organization:
International Marine Minerals Society
Pages:
5
File Size:
5718 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2017

Abstract

"Recent concerns over the availability of many mineral raw materials, and newly available technological developments, produced renewed interest in deep-sea mining. However, environmental concerns, with variable degrees of justification, are raising opposition to the concept. The forecast for the behavior of consumption versus availability of many raw materials, nearly all critical metals, arguably show that consumption will grow much faster than resource discovery onshore. Finding new sources of raw materials seems inescapable. The deep seafloor stands out as the only likely candidate.Sea Floor Mining and the EcosystemMarine mining has already started, decades ago, for diamonds, currently up to depths near 400m. Although the industry recognizes there is a footprint, it considers the footprint quite minor, because the area mined is small: in Namibia, where offshore diamond mining is now 70% of the country’s total, only 3% of the concession of 3,700 sq miles (9600km2) have been mined. As plans to mine deep-sea massive sulphide deposits and polymetallic nodules progress, the environmental concerns grow. Some of these concerns are as follows:?The deep-sea ecosystems are composed of long-lived species, with low rates of reproduction. The environment may not recover from mining on a human time scale;"
Citation

APA: Fernando J. A. S. Barriga  (2017)  Can Recycling and the Circular Economy Render Seafloor Mining Unnecessary?

MLA: Fernando J. A. S. Barriga Can Recycling and the Circular Economy Render Seafloor Mining Unnecessary?. International Marine Minerals Society, 2017.

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