Deep sea mining: from exploration to exploitation

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 16
- File Size:
- 4681 KB
- Publication Date:
- Sep 1, 2014
Abstract
"Earth provides natural resources, such as fossil fuels and minerals that are vital for human life. As the global demand grows, especially for strategic minerals, commodity prices rapidly rise. Thus there is an identifiable risk of increasing supply shortage for minerals. Hence a major element in a long-term economic strategy must be, to ensure security of supply for these strategic minerals. In this rapidly changing global economic landscape, deep sea mining has gone from a distant possibility to a likely reality within just a decade.Although deep sea minerals extraction was investigated in the 1970’s, it was abandoned because of changing commodity economics, advances in on-land exploration techniques, growing concern on environmental impact, and political and legal aspects with regard to ownership issues. The developmental data from those days, if still available, are not adequate to allow engineering and building of an integral system for extraction of deep sea minerals without additional R&D work. Thus, deep sea mining is yet to attain a Technology Readiness Level (TRL) sufficient to successfully undertake deep sea mining operations, from resource discovery to resource assessment and to resource exploitation [Blue Mining, 2014]."
Citation
APA:
(2014) Deep sea mining: from exploration to exploitationMLA: Deep sea mining: from exploration to exploitation. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2014.