Climate Politics

Seabed Regulators Will Scrutinize Mining Firms Seeking US Licenses

The move is in response to a Trump directive to issue mining licenses in global waters under US law. 

The International Seabed Authority (ISA) headquarters in Kingston, Jamaica, on July 16.

Photographer: Amelie Bottollier-Depois/AFP/Getty Images

A United Nations-affiliated organization with jurisdiction over the global seabed took a tentative step Monday to respond to US President Donald Trump’s fast-tracking of deep-sea mining for critical minerals in international waters.

The International Seabed Authority’s policymaking body requested the organization’s secretary-general to obtain information from ISA-licensed seabed mining companies at risk of violating their contracts under a UN treaty that prohibits unilateral mining. That was an oblique reference to seabed miner The Metals Company (TMC), which has applied for US authorization to extract electric-vehicle battery metals in an area of the Pacific Ocean it licenses from the ISA.