Greens Demand Answers As Crown Agency Backs Deep Sea Mining

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Banning deep-sea mining is more urgent than ever following the news that a New Zealand Crown Research Institute, NIWA is set to support what could easily become a damaging mining project in the Pacific Ocean.

โ€œOnce again, we call on the Government to do the right thing and back an immediate moratorium on deep sea mining,โ€ says Teanau Tuiono, spokesperson for Pacific Peoples.

With the support of NIWA, Australiaโ€™s national science agency, CSIRO, is leading a project in the Pacific to assist The Metals Company (TMC) to develop an environmental management plan for its deep sea mining project, which is backed by the Government of Nauru.

โ€œNews of NIWA involvement in this project flies in the face of New Zealand and the Pacificโ€™s interests.

โ€œAdvice provided by MFAT to Ministers in 2021 suggested that โ€œour approach to deep sea mining must recognise the mana of each Pacific Island country.โ€

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โ€œThe Government cannot credibly claim to be supporting Pacific interests when it refuses to join the call for a moratorium on deep sea mining, while at the same time a Crown agency advances work that supports deep sea miners,โ€ says Teanau Tuiono.

Green Party oceans and fisheries spokesperson, Eugenie Sage added:

โ€œThe Governmentโ€™s position on deep sea mining is becoming increasingly untenable. Ministers have repeatedly said they will not support a moratorium on the basis that the Government wants to negotiate environmental standards for mining.

โ€œBut even before robust standards can be developed and before any such standards are agreed, a Government owned Crown Research Institute appears willing to ease the path for a large company to move in and start taking what they want from the ocean.

โ€œMinisters Woods and Mahuta need to explain how NIWA providing support to a company with an interest in mining under international waters aligns with our environmental protection values and commitment to upholding Pacific mana.

โ€œThe Government of Nauru recently triggered a fast-track process that could see mining begin as early as July 2023. It requested that mining regulations be finalised in order to โ€œfacilitate the approval of plans of work for exploitationโ€ by TMC.

โ€œThe Government has justified its refusal to support a moratorium on deep sea mining on the basis that it is involved in these negotiations, which it claims will allow for high environmental standards.

โ€œRecently published research suggests that we may not even have the knowledge to assess whether environmental standards will be strong enough to protect the deep-sea environment.

โ€œMining would be enormously damaging, so it is astonishing that a Crown agency is able to get involved with a potentially destructive project before there are any standards in place.

โ€œProviding scientific support to companies in their attempts to mine the international seabed โ€“ the common heritage of humankind, according to the UN โ€“ flies in the face of New Zealandโ€™s long-standing commitment to ocean protection on the international stage.

โ€œThe Government must stand on the right side of history and urgently support a moratorium on deep sea mining in international waters,โ€ says Eugenie Sage.