
'we don't know the impact': conservationists fight attempts to mine ocean floor
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SEAFLOOR FROM NORWAY TO NAMIBIA IS COVETED There is also interest in Norway, Mexico and Namibia and an exploratory contract has controversially been handed out by the government of Papua New
Guinea. Duncan Currie, a political and legal adviser to the Deep Sea Conservation Coalition, said the pressure from mining companies was incessant and he said the threat was unquantifiable.
"We know very little about the ocean and the processes involved and it's difficult to know the impact but we are rapidly beginning to understand the threat to the deep sea in
particular. Scientists are concerned about the deoxygenation of the sea floor and the sequestering of carbons and those sorts of issues," Mr. Currie told Sputnik. But he has been
most involved in the fight to protect the seabed off the coast of his native New Zealand. Mr Currie, who also advises a pressure group called Kiwis Against Seabed Mining (KASM), said there
were two separate threats to the ocean off New Zealand. A company called Trans-Tasman Resources (TTR) is seeking to salvage iron ore from around 40 metres down in the Taranaki Bight, around
12 miles off the west coast of North Island. Iron sand has been mined onshore in New Zealand since 1850 and the iron ore is mostly exported to China and Russia. A second proposal would
involve dredging the ocean floor 500 metres down between the east coast of North Island and the Chatham Islands in a bid to find phosphates, which are used to make fertiliser. Chatham Rock
Phosphate, the company behind it, claim most of the million tonnes of phosphates used in the New Zealand farming industry was imported from Morocco and the seabed mining would actually
reduce the country's carbon footprint. NEW ZEALAND FARMERS USE PHOSPHATES 'STOLEN' FROM WESTERN SAHARA Much of the phosphates imported into New Zealand are actually mined in
the Western Sahara, a territory which Morocco has illegally occupied since 1975 despite the objections of the indigenous Sahrawi people. Both TTR and Chatham Rock had their initial bids for
exploration contracts turned down by independent panels appointed by the New Zealand government. TTR is seeking to overturn that decision in the Court of Appeal. Mr. Currie said the fishing
industry in New Zealand was implacably opposed to deep sea mining, as were many indigenous peoples. He said although New Zealand's Prime Minister, Jacinta Ardern's Labour Party is
propped up in government by the Green Party through a confidence and supply agreement, the government has shown little interest in stopping deep sea mining. _The views and opinions expressed
by the speaker do not necessarily reflect those of Sputnik._