Deep-sea mining rules stall despite mounting urgency
Global efforts to regulate deep-sea mining face delays – as unresolved rules and unilateral moves heighten uncertainty over the industry’s future.
Abatify Summary
**The regulatory impasse on deep-sea mining threatens the integrity of high-value Blue Carbon sinks and creates irreversible risks for marine biodiversity.**
- Unregulated extraction poses a direct threat to benthic carbon storage, potentially releasing sequestered carbon into the water column and undermining global LULUCF objectives.
- The disruption of deep-ocean ecosystems could sever critical links in the oceanic carbon pump, complicating the baseline for nature-based carbon removal credits.
- A lack of environmental safeguards contradicts the ICVCM Core Carbon Principle regarding 'Environmental Integrity,' as it risks permanent biodiversity loss in exchange for mineral extraction.
**Regulatory delays create significant financial uncertainty for transition mineral markets and complicate corporate Scope 3 compliance frameworks.**
- The absence of a clear International Seabed Authority (ISA) framework mirrors the governance gaps seen in early Article 6.4 negotiations, leading to fragmented jurisdictional standards.
- Financial institutions are increasingly likely to implement exclusionary policies against deep-sea mining to maintain SBTi alignment, potentially constricting capital for the battery tech supply chain.
- The threat of unilateral mining moves by individual states risks creating a 'race to the bottom' for ESG reporting, making it difficult for B Corp or LEED-certified entities to verify ethical mineral sourcing.