Could Deep Sea Mining Break China’s Grip on Critical Minerals?

Could Deep Sea Mining Break China’s Grip on Critical Minerals?
Manganese nodules on the ocean floor, May 27, 2020 Photo by Science Photo Library via Reuters

Miles beneath the surface of the Pacific Ocean lies a vast stretch of seabed littered with what look like dull, dark rocks.

Those rocks are actually polymetallic nodules, rich in the minerals that drive modern economies. They could help the United States break its reliance on China, which otherwise controls the market. But nobody has ever mined seabed nodules at scale, much less processed them for industrial use.

The United States is about to try. But as a recent RAND study found, getting those nodules to the surface is only part of the challenge.

“We need to find alternative sources of these critical minerals that don’t involve China,” said Tom LaTourrette, a senior physical scientist at RAND. “This is an all-of-government, all-hands effort. Seabed mining is one way we might accomplish it.”

Dirty potatoes: That the seabed is pebbled with rocky nodules has been known for a very long time. The HMS Challenger dredged them up by the hundreds during its voyage of discovery in the 1870s. “When rolled on the deck,” an expedition scientist wrote, “they looked like a pile of dirty potatoes.”

Those dirty potatoes contain a fortune in nickel, cobalt, manganese, and copper. Those minerals are critical components in everything from batteries and electric engines to advanced weapons. And for now, the global market for them runs through China. The government there has not hesitated to pinch supplies when it wants to make a point. Seabed mining could give the United States a new and much more secure source.

But the Pacific seabed is one of the hardest-to-reach places on earth. The area identified as the best bet for mining is around 2.5 miles down, deeper than the wreck of the Titanic.

Immediate action: Mining companies have proposed to use remote-controlled robots or seabed crawlers tethered to surface ships to bring up nodules. They have begun to seek approval not from the International Seabed Authority, but from the United States. The seabed authority oversees resources in areas of the seafloor beyond national jurisdictions. But it has wrestled for more than two decades with how to regulate mining. The Trump Administration has promised no such delay. It plans to use an existing U.S. regulatory framework.

President Trump has described seabed resources as “key to strengthening our economy [and] securing our energy future.” He has called for “immediate action” to explore and map the seafloor and to collect and process the minerals there.

One big challenge: Those nodules can’t just plug into an electric car and be ready to go. They need to be processed and refined into usable compounds. But the technology to extract all four critical minerals from nodules remains largely unproven. One country has come to dominate mineral processing worldwide and is well positioned to take over the processing of nodules, too. That would be China.

“China is ready to make it happen,” said Fabian Villalobos, a senior engineer at RAND. “People see seabed mining as something China has not yet dominated. They think it’s an opportunity to escape China’s control of the market. But if other countries don’t start to figure out how to enter this market and process these nodules, that’s just another resource that China will probably dominate in a few years after a regulatory framework is in place.”

The United States should consider developing that side of the industry with as much urgency as the mining itself, RAND found. Some efforts are underway to design and build processing plants in the United States. Federal grants, loans, and purchase agreements could help get those projects off the ground. “You can mine all you want,” LaTourrette said. “If you send it all to China for processing, you’re not helping one iota.”

China knows this, too. As part of their study, researchers interviewed representatives from half a dozen mining companies. Most said China is already pushing hard to sign processing deals, before their mining equipment even hits the water.

Weighing the impacts: Mining on land has often had catastrophic impacts: environmental damage; mineral conflicts; displaced communities; human-rights abuses. Seabed mining could provide an alternative, researchers noted. But the impact that mining could have on the deep ocean—or on related industries, like fishing—is not well understood.

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