Norway wants to begin deep sea mining in the Arctic: Here is why it’s a bad idea https://perma.cc/V2TY-M4ZP
Yet, despite strong criticism from a number of countries, the environmental movement and hundreds of marine scientists warning of the risks of deep sea mining, the Norwegian government proposed in June 2023 opening up a large area in the Arctic for deep sea mining between Greenland and Norway. The area they propose to open for mining is home to vulnerable whales, seabirds, fish and deep sea creatures that are still being discovered. The Norwegian government claims this can be done with an “acceptable degree of environmental impact”, but mining on the seabed cannot be done without harming the deep sea environment, according to warnings from, among others, the UN Environment Programme, the World’s Economic Forum, the International Ocean Panel that Norway leads, the Norwegian Environment Agency (Miljødirektoratet) and the Norwegian Institute of Marine Research (Havforskningsinstituttet).
Harmful marine extractives: Deep-Sea Mining https://perma.cc/UB72-G3G7
The risks of deep-sea mining are not fully understood - here's why that matters https://perma.cc/H2C9-T62V
Deep Sea Mining Could Destroy Undiscovered Species, Says Ocean Panel https://perma.cc/FNS6-P9E7
Gruvedrift på havbunnen: Stor mangel på kunnskap om områdene https://perma.cc/N8JU-N54U
We are already in a climate and nature crisis: deep sea mining is totally unacceptable. Moreover, what happens in the Arctic never stays in the Arctic: this region is the air conditioner of the planet and we desperately need it.
The noise and light pollution from the machines could disturb and impact the wildlife in the sea, even in shallow water. Water conducts sound very well – the noise travels hundreds of kilometers through the water, and can be particularly harmful to marine mammals, such as whales and dolphins.
https://www.greenpeace.org/international/act/stop-deep-sea-mining/
https://t.me/NorgeTelegramFreaks/24
https://t.me/MissionWillowProject
Yet, despite strong criticism from a number of countries, the environmental movement and hundreds of marine scientists warning of the risks of deep sea mining, the Norwegian government proposed in June 2023 opening up a large area in the Arctic for deep sea mining between Greenland and Norway. The area they propose to open for mining is home to vulnerable whales, seabirds, fish and deep sea creatures that are still being discovered. The Norwegian government claims this can be done with an “acceptable degree of environmental impact”, but mining on the seabed cannot be done without harming the deep sea environment, according to warnings from, among others, the UN Environment Programme, the World’s Economic Forum, the International Ocean Panel that Norway leads, the Norwegian Environment Agency (Miljødirektoratet) and the Norwegian Institute of Marine Research (Havforskningsinstituttet).
Harmful marine extractives: Deep-Sea Mining https://perma.cc/UB72-G3G7
The risks of deep-sea mining are not fully understood - here's why that matters https://perma.cc/H2C9-T62V
Deep Sea Mining Could Destroy Undiscovered Species, Says Ocean Panel https://perma.cc/FNS6-P9E7
Gruvedrift på havbunnen: Stor mangel på kunnskap om områdene https://perma.cc/N8JU-N54U
We are already in a climate and nature crisis: deep sea mining is totally unacceptable. Moreover, what happens in the Arctic never stays in the Arctic: this region is the air conditioner of the planet and we desperately need it.
The noise and light pollution from the machines could disturb and impact the wildlife in the sea, even in shallow water. Water conducts sound very well – the noise travels hundreds of kilometers through the water, and can be particularly harmful to marine mammals, such as whales and dolphins.
https://www.greenpeace.org/international/act/stop-deep-sea-mining/
https://t.me/NorgeTelegramFreaks/24
https://t.me/MissionWillowProject