The future of electric cars may depend on mining critically important metals on the ocean floor.
That's the view of the engineer leading a major European investigation into new sources of key elements.
Demand is soaring for the metal cobalt - an essential ingredient in batteries and abundant in rocks on the seabed.
Laurens de Jonge, who's running the EU project, says the transition to electric cars means "we need those resources".
He was speaking during a unique set of underwater
experiments designed to assess the impact of extracting rocks from the
ocean floor.
In calm waters 15km off the coast of Malaga in
southern Spain, a prototype mining machine was lowered to the seabed and
'driven' by remote control.
Cameras attached to the Apollo II
machine recorded its progress and, crucially, monitored how the
aluminium tracks stirred up clouds of sand and silt as they advanced. Did deep sea mining start with CIA plot? An array of instruments was
positioned nearby to measure how far these clouds were carried on the
currents - the risk of seabed mining smothering marine life over a wide
area is one of the biggest concerns.
What is 'deep sea mining'?
It's
hard to visualise, but imagine opencast mining taking place at the
bottom of the ocean, where huge remote-controlled machines would
excavate rocks from the seabed and pump them up to the surface.
The concept has been talked about for decades, but until now it's been thought too difficult to operate in the high-pressure, pitch-black conditions as much as 5km deep.
Now
the technology is advancing to the point where dozens of government and
private ventures are weighing up the potential for mines on the ocean
floor.
Why would anyone bother?
The
short answer: demand. The rocks of the seabed are far richer in
valuable metals than those on land and there's a growing clamour to get
at them.
Billions of potato-sized rocks known as "nodules" litter
the abyssal plains of the Pacific and other oceans and many are
brimming with cobalt, suddenly highly sought after as the boom in the
production of batteries gathers pace.
At the moment, most of the
world's cobalt is mined in the Democratic Republic of Congo where for
years there've been allegations of child labour, environmental damage
and widespread corruption. Expanding production there is not straightforward
which is leading mining companies to weigh the potential advantages of
cobalt on the seabed.
Laurens de Jonge, who's in charge of the EU
project, known as Blue Nodules, said: "It's not difficult to access -
you don't have to go deep into tropical forests or deep into mines.
"It's readily available on the seafloor, it's almost like potato harvesting only 5km deep in the ocean."
And
he says society faces a choice: there may in future be alternative ways
of making batteries for electric cars - and some manufacturers are
exploring them - but current technology requires cobalt. Image copyrightGeomarImage caption
Laurens de Jonge likens the process to "potato harvesting" 5km down in the ocean
"If you want to make a fast change, you need cobalt
quick and you need a lot of it - if you want to make a lot of batteries
you need the resources to do that."
His view is backed by a group of leading scientists at London's Natural History Museum and other institutions.
They
recently calculated that meeting the UK's targets for electric cars by
2050 would require nearly twice the world's current output of cobalt.
So what are the risks?
No one can be entirely sure, which makes the research off Spain highly relevant.
It's widely accepted that whatever is in the path of the mining machines will be destroyed - there's no argument about that.
But
what's uncertain is how far the damage will reach, in particular the
size of the plumes of silt and sand churned up and the distance they
will travel, potentially endangering marine life far beyond the mining
site.
The chief scientist on board, Henko de Stigter of the Dutch
marine research institute NIOZ, points out that life in the deep Pacific
- where mining is likely to start first - has adapted to the usually
"crystal clear conditions". So for any organisms feeding by filter, waters that are suddenly filled with stirred-up sediment would be threatening.
"Many
species are unknown or not described, and let alone do we know how they
will respond to this activity - we can only estimate."
And Dr de Stigter warned of the danger of doing to the oceans what humanity has done to the land.
"With every new human activity it's often difficult to foresee all the consequences of that in the long term.
"What is new here is that we are entering an environment that is almost completely untouched."
Could deep sea mining be made less damaging?
Ralf
Langeler thinks so. He's the engineer in charge of the Apollo II mining
machine and he believes the design will minimise any impacts.
Like
Laurens de Jonge, he works for the Dutch marine engineering giant Royal
IHC and he says his technology can help reduce the environmental
effects.
The machine is meant to cut a very shallow slice into
the top 6-10cm of the seabed, lifting the nodules. Its tracks are made
with lightweight aluminium to avoid sinking too far into the surface. Image caption
David Shukman (R) talks to Ralf Langeler, the engineer in charge of the Apollo II mining machine
Silt and sand stirred up by the extraction process
should then be channelled into special vents at the rear of the machine
and released in a narrow stream, to try to avoid the plume spreading too
far.
"We'll always change the environment, that's for sure,"
Ralf says, "but that's the same with onshore mining and our purpose is
to minimise the impact."
I ask him if deep sea mining is now a realistic prospect.
"One day it's going to happen, especially with the rising demand for special metals - and they're there on the sea floor."
Who decides if it goes ahead?
Mining in territorial waters can be approved by an individual government.
That
happened a decade ago when Papua New Guinea gave the go-ahead to a
Canadian company, Nautilus Minerals, to mine gold and copper from
hydrothermal vents in the Bismarck Sea.
Since then the project
has been repeatedly delayed as the company ran short of funds and the
prime minister of PNG called for a 10-year moratorium on deep sea
mining.
A Nautilus Minerals representative has told me that the
company is being restructured and that they remain hopeful of starting
to mine.
Meanwhile, nearly 30 other ventures are eyeing areas of
ocean floor beyond national waters, and these are regulated by a UN
body, the International Seabed Authority (ISA).
It has issued licences for exploration and is due next year to publish the rules that would govern future mining. The EU's Blue Nodules project involves a host of different institutions and countries.
The
vessel used for the underwater research off Spain, the Sarmiento de
Gamboa, is operated by CSIC, the Spanish National Research Council.
Electric car future may depend on deep sea mining
Reviewed by hafizbd
on
November 13, 2019
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