Quest for Cobalt Treasure on the Ocean Floor
·
UN Body hands over Earth Resources to
Canadian Company
Mining
in parts of the Pacific Ocean was meant to benefit poor
countries, but an international agency gave a Canadian company access to prized
seabed sites with metals crucial to the green energy revolution.
As demand
grows globally for metals needed to make batteries for electric vehicles, one of
the richest untapped sources of the raw materials lies two and a half miles beneath
the surface of the Pacific Ocean.
This
remote section of the seabed, about 1,500 miles southwest of San Diego, could soon
become the world’s first industrial-scale mining site in international waters.
The Metals
Company, based in Vancouver, has secured exclusive access to tons of seabed rocks
packed with cobalt, copper and nickel — enough, it says, to power 280
million electric vehicles, equivalent to the entire fleet of cars
in the United States.
The historic
climate legislation that Congress passed this month, extending tax credits for buyers
of electric cars, will only accelerate the need for these materials as automakers
also push forward with plans to phase out production of gasoline-powered vehicles.
The Metals Company hopes to build a plant in Texas to process the seabed rocks and
has been
lobbying for federal assistance to do so.
“No mining
has ever been done on a scale like this on the planet,” said James A.R. McFarlane,
former head of environmental monitoring at the International Seabed Authority, an
agency affiliated with the United Nations that will regulate mining by the Metals
Company and the many other businesses and countries expected to follow.
An examination
by The New York Times of how the Metals Company is prepared to exploit this new
frontier in the green energy revolution — the firm calculates it will clear $31
billion in earnings over the 25-year life of the project — tells the story of a
single-minded, 15-year-long courtship of the small Jamaica-based seabed agency that
holds the keys to the world’s underwater treasures.
Interviews
and hundreds of pages of
emails, letters and other internal documents show that the firm’s
executives received key information from the Seabed Authority beginning in 2007,
giving a major edge to their mining ambitions. The agency provided data identifying
some of the most valuable seabed tracts, and then set aside the prized sites for
the company’s future use, according to the materials.
The sharing
of that information has angered employees at the agency, who said some of the data
was meant for developing countries trying to compete with richer countries, something
the agency is mandated under international law to assist. “You are violating the
legal concept behind the Seabed Authority,” Sandor Mulsow,
who held top positions at the agency before leaving in 2019, said in an interview.
“It’s scandalous.”
The Metals
Company is one of nearly
two dozen contractors that have exploration deals with the agency;
most of them are held by nations. But the firm has been especially aggressive in
pushing the Seabed Authority to allow it to start mining, and is now racing to begin
in late 2024.
The undertaking
has raised concerns among environmentalists about the perpetually underfunded agency’s
commitment to protecting life on the ocean floor, and has renewed broader questions
about who gets to profit from the riches of the sea.
The Seabed
Authority was established under the auspices of the United Nations well before climate
change set off a surge in demand for the metals. Though it has never gotten off
the ground, a unit of the agency was charged with leveling the playing field for
developing countries, in part by reserving metal-rich tracts of the
ocean floor and helping to mine them.
With
jurisdiction over half the
planet, the agency’s 50 employees work out of offices here in Jamaica’s capital
on a small annual appropriation of $10
million.
The agency
has at times been at war with itself, interviews and documents show. Employees have
complained about the secretary general’s spending — on travel and a chauffeured
luxury car — and sounded alarms about ethical shortcomings, including a revolving
door of consultants and staff lawyers who have worked for companies with matters
before the agency.
At a
meeting of the agency’s governing body last year, a Metals Company contractor was
among a group of businesspeople who roamed freely among the international delegates
as they debated agenda items, including the firm’s request for the authority to
sign off on a plan to test mining equipment. One of the top rule-making bodies at
the Seabed Authority, its legal and technical commission, is secretive, meeting
behind closed doors, and some of its own members also work for mining contractors,
The Times found.
The agency’s
relationship with the Metals Company has turned the system on its head in other
ways. Developing nations working with the Seabed Authority are supposed to get access
to data in certain mining areas before companies do. But the reverse happened: A
top executive at the firm got the vital data first, then secured two tiny island
nations as sponsors.
Even
with those partners — the Pacific islands of Nauru and Tonga, which have a combined
population of 120,000 and are nowhere near the mining zone — the firm has maintained
nearly complete financial control over the project, including rights to all but
a fraction of the anticipated profits.
“This
company set out to game the system and use a poor, developing Pacific nation as
the conduit to exploit these resources,” said Lord Fusitu’a,
a former member of the Tonga parliament. He said he was given less than an hour
in 2014 to review regulations the
country adopted to join the effort.
The governments
of Nauru and Tonga, which declined requests for comment, have lobbied the agency
on behalf of the Metals Company. In
a letter, Nauru’s president, Lionel Aingimea,
told the agency that the mining would help secure a carbon-neutral future and financially
benefit his country.
“Nauru
is no one’s puppet, I can assure you,” Gerard Barron, the Metals Company’s chief
executive, said in an interview.
A law
firm retained by the Seabed Authority, often referred to as the I.S.A., rejected
the notion that anyone at the agency had acted inappropriately in sharing data or
engaging with contractors, and said that all travel and other expenses by the secretary
general were fully authorized. The legal and technical commission, the firm said,
“meets entirely properly” with its members and exercises independence in its decisions.
“The
I.S.A. has not, at any time, improperly or unlawfully shared confidential data,”
the firm, Withers Bergman, said in a statement to The Times.
Michael
Lodge, the British
lawyer who has served as secretary general for nearly six years,
and was its legal counsel when the data was shared beginning in 2007, also defended
the agency’s actions. Around that time, he said in an interview at the headquarters
in December, it publicly
released summaries of some data in an effort to draw attention to
the seabed’s riches and generate interest in mining, and it welcomed inquiries by
potential partners.
Mr. Barron
said he was unaware that Nautilus Minerals had gotten access to some mining data
before forming partnerships with Nauru and Tonga. (He was an investor in Nautilus,
the forerunner company that received the information, and later became
chief executive of what is now the Metals Company in 2017, which
purchased certain Nautilus assets.) Nonetheless, he acknowledged, the company had
rights to what is “generally regarded as some of the best areas out there.” In
a filing last year with the Securities and Exchange Commission,
the company confirmed it had relied on data twice provided by the agency.
In
March, Mr. Barron told Wall Street investors that seabed mining
had been made all the more urgent for the United States and its allies because of
China’s growing dominance of the cobalt trade and Russia’s role as a major nickel
supplier.
As it
seeks approval to begin operations, the firm has teamed up with Allseas, an offshore oil industry contractor,
Glencore, a mining giant, and Maersk, one of the world’s largest shipping companies.
The metals are found in potato-size rocks known as polymetallic nodules, and the
firm would suck them up from the ocean floor with a giant underwater vacuum cleaner
and transport them to shore.
The biggest
hurdle is the enormous task underway at the Seabed Authority to enact the world’s
first environmental regulations of deep-sea mining in international waters — and
a royalty system to collect revenues from contractors extracting the metals. The
effort has been in the works for years but recently accelerated after Nauru, one
of the Metals Company’s sponsors, invoked
a provision effectively mandating that it wrap up by next
year.
The plans
to begin mining by the Metals Company and other contractors have generated fierce
opposition from some environmental groups, which along with government leaders like
President Emmanuel Macron of France have
called for a moratorium on mining
until scientists can study the remote seabed and better understand the consequences
of an industrial-scale operation.
“We have
no clue what is going to happen,” said Stefan Bräger,
a former Seabed Authority marine biologist who now serves as an adviser to the German
government. “It’s like driving on the wrong side of the road at night and turning
off your headlights.”
Both
Mr. Barron and Mr. Lodge said in interviews that the criticism was unfounded. They
said the mining would be for the “benefit of mankind,” as required under the U.N.
Convention on the Law of the Sea, which established the Seabed
Authority, and they predicted that it would cause less ecological damage than open-pit
mining.
Mr. Lodge
mocked his opponents, referring to environmentalist groups as propagandists.
“To say,
‘Don’t harm the ocean’ — it is the easiest message in the world, right? You just
have to show a photo of a turtle with a straw in its nose,” he said. “Everybody
in Brooklyn can then say, ‘I don’t want to harm the ocean.’ But they sure want their
Teslas.”
‘Exclusive Benefit of Mankind’
A miniature
replica of the British Royal Navy’s H.M.S. Challenger sits
near Mr. Lodge’s office at the Seabed Authority headquarters. The famed ship set
sail 150 years ago on an expedition that
mapped the ocean floor.
A dredge
on that voyage scraped “several
peculiar black oval bodies” out of the Pacific, the crew reported in
1873. The polymetallic nodules, small enough to fit in the palm of a hand, had formed
over millions of years and contained high concentrations of valuable metals.
A
century later, China, Japan, the Soviet Union, the United States
and some European nations began exploring a stretch of the ocean between Hawaii
and Mexico, known as the Clarion-Clipperton Zone, that has an especially large volume of the nodules.
With
no mining rules in place, the U.N. intervened and adopted the Convention on the
Law of the Sea, a treaty that went into effect in 1994 and now has been ratified
by 167 countries and the European Union. The agreement established
the Seabed Authority, granting it exclusive jurisdiction over mining in international
waters — those not under the territorial rule of individual countries — and charging
it with the creation of a regulatory system.
A delegate
from Malta had laid out the mission years earlier during a 1967
speech at the U.N. The seabed should be used “for
the exclusive benefit of mankind as a whole,” said the delegate, Arvid Pardo, adding that poorer nations should get “preferential
consideration in the event of financial benefits” and that mining should not cause
“serious
impairment of the marine environment.”
The United
States, under President Ronald Reagan, refused to ratify
the
treaty, insisting, among other things, that it gave too much authority
to developing nations and put American businesses at a disadvantage. But the country
agreed to act generally in accordance with its provisions, which extend to other
activities like shipping, fishing and navigation.
As the
rules stand, any nation can seek permission to conduct surveys to identify mining
sites, and China, France, India and South Korea, among other richer nations, have
done just that. When they find worthy locations, they must hand over half of them
to the Seabed Authority, which sets them aside as “reserved
areas” where less developed countries can initiate their own projects.
The authority
has allocated roughly 200,000
square miles of seabed — larger than the size of California
— to developing nations to do exploratory work in the reserved areas, with nearly
half of that space now under the control of the Metals Company.
Starting
two decades ago, the Seabed Authority began keeping track of the reserved areas
with the highest concentration of nodules, based on countries’ proprietary surveys.
Some of the data was used for a modeling project that charted the geology of the
ocean floor, and its potential for mining, though the public version of that project
aggregated the data and did not disclose anything proprietary.
As the
agency clarified in a public
statement in 2000, detailed sample station data was not to be shared
outside the organization. “Data and information ‘of commercial value’ given to the
authority by a seabed contractor shall be considered confidential,” it said.
‘Mother Nature’s Gift’
Around
the same time, executives at Nautilus Minerals were keenly interested in the reserved
areas and turned to the Seabed Authority for help in deciding where to focus their
attention, the documents show.
Agency
officials held a series of meetings in New
York and Jamaica with David Heydon, a geologist who later
became Nautilus’s chief executive, and his son Robert, who also worked there, to
discuss seabed mining.
Neither
Mr. Heydon nor his son, who is now an executive at the
Metals Company, responded to requests for comment. A company spokesman also did
not respond to questions about them.
In one
meeting in 2007, emails and other documents show, the agency’s secretary general
at the time, Satya N. Nandan, shared agency records about
the reserved areas with the company.
“Thank
you for hosting Scott Trebilcock and Robert Heydon in Kingston last month, and providing Nautilus Minerals
Inc. (‘Nautilus’) with the opportunity to review data pertaining to the I.S.A.’s
Reserved Areas,” David
Heydon wrote in a 2007 letter to Mr. Nandan. Mr. Nandan died in 2020.
Mr. Heydon went on to ask that three of the
four
most promising locations in the reserved areas be set aside for Nautilus
while it sought a nation to sponsor its mining ambitions. “Nautilus looks forward
to submitting its full application to the I.S.A. early next year once State Sponsorship
has been obtained,” he
wrote.
Nauru,
one of the world’s smallest nations, quickly emerged as a leading candidate for
the Heydons, who are from Australia, which previously
turned to the island to house
its refugees and to mine
a mineral used in fertilizer. The country, with just 11,000 people,
had only a tiny environmental agency. It also did not demand much in exchange for
sponsorship, having no ability of its own to pursue such an undertaking.
Mr. Barron,
the Metals Company chief executive, would not say how much money Nauru was on tap
to receive. A community leader in Tonga, another island partner, said in an interview
that the company had agreed to pay it $2 per ton as a “mining production fee.” That
payment would amount to less than half of one percent of the firm’s total estimated
value of the mined material. The Metals Company would not confirm this fee.
Separately,
the Metals Company would pay an undetermined royalty fee to the Seabed Authority
once commercial mining began.
The company,
a merger of DeepGreen and the Sustainable Opportunities Acquisition Corporation,
was founded in 2021 and markets itself as a publicly traded start-up that views
“the climate crisis as the biggest challenge of our time.” Its singular focus is
harvesting polymetallic nodules, which it describes as the cleanest source of battery-grade
metals on the planet — in shorthand, batteries in a rock.
“It’s
just Mother Nature’s gift to us,” Mr. Barron, who was paid $14.2
million in salary and stock options last year, said as he relaxed
on a ship that had just returned to San Diego from an exploratory expedition.
‘Sit Down, Shut Up’
The information
given to Nautilus, according to an email
written by Robert Heydon, included an “Excel
spreadsheet supplied by the authority that shows the grade and abundance recorded
at specific sample stations.”
Follow-up
correspondence from Mr. Heydon and others made clear that
they knew they should not be given certain data until they had a contract to partner
with a developing nation. But Nautilus requested more information to speed things
along.
“As you
would be aware it takes quite a few months to put together a large scale exploration
campaign,” Mr.
Heydon wrote in 2011 to Mr.
Lodge, then the agency’s legal counsel.
In his
draft reply, Mr.
Lodge noted that the Seabed Authority was subject to “certain
restrictions on the disclosure of such data to anyone external to the authority.”
But in a separate
email to colleagues, he suggested there was a path that would allow
them to accommodate Mr. Heydon: the public release of
summaries of survey data.
Since
it had made the summaries public, he reasoned, the agency could share at least some
of the data Mr. Heydon had requested.
In another
email, an agency employee acknowledged that some of the data provided to Nautilus
was supposed to have been “classified,” at least before the company secured a contract
to do exploratory work in the reserved areas.
“Here
is the entire reserved area data,” Vijay Kodagali, a senior
scientific officer, now deceased, wrote
in 2012 after a Nautilus consultant asked for another copy of the
data provided earlier. “This is supposed to be classified data and not to be disclosed
to others.”
Three
former senior staff members at the agency and a current member of the Seabed Authority
Council, the agency’s governing body, said in interviews that they believed the
data sharing in some cases violated agency rules. There was no suggestion that the
Metals Company acted improperly in requesting the information.
“There
were times that you were just told to sit down, shut up and do what you’re told,”
said Mr. McFarlane, who resigned from his post as the authority’s top environmental
official in August 2011, several months after questions about the data sharing emerged.
In its
statement, Withers Bergman said that the Seabed Authority staff routinely interacted
with contractors pursuing mining sites, but reiterated that the agency had always
honored data confidentiality rules.
“It is not unusual and is entirely proper and normal
practice for the I.S.A. secretariat to engage with contractors to discuss proposals
which those contractors have regarding potential applications,” the statement said,
“including — as in the case of Nautilus — the contractor providing a confidential
indication of the areas under consideration.”
‘Smell the Desperation’
Even
with the prized information in hand, the Metals Company has
faced concerns among some agency officials that it is dominating
a resource not intended for wealthy countries or international mining companies
with nominal partners.
The Metals
Company has rights to three of the seven exploratory contracts issued by the Seabed
Authority in areas reserved for developing nations.
The rules
require that the sponsoring nations, in this case Nauru and Tonga, exercise “effective
control” over the mining projects so they are not partners in name
only. The Metals Company has met this requirement, in part, by setting up nonprofit
foundations to oversee operations, but they are controlled by the company, which
has just one
permanent employee on each island, according to securities filings.
Operations are instead run from Australia, Canada and the United States.
The Metals
Company secured access
to a third reserved area in
2015,
sponsored by the central Pacific island of Kiribati.
“These
venture-capital-backed companies can smell the desperation in these small island
economies,” said Maureen Penjueli, coordinator of the
Fiji-based Pacific Network on Globalization, a nonprofit that promotes the rights
of Pacific island nations.
Nii Allotey Odunton, a mining engineer
from Ghana who served as the Seabed Authority’s secretary general from 2009 to 2016,
said that developing nations were left with no choice but to work closely with private
contractors, particularly because the unit within the agency meant to facilitate
mining was never created.
“The
only realistic option for most developing states therefore was to form partnerships
with commercial interests that have access to the financial capital and technology
necessary to conduct deep-sea exploration,” Mr. Odunton
said in
a speech at the U.N. in 2011. (He
died
this year.)
Mr. Barron
said the arrangements were good for the islands. “If you look at a nation like Nauru,
and if you ask them, ‘Well, what are your other economic development opportunities?’
there’s not a long list,” he said.
Squire
Jeremiah, a member of Nauru’s parliament in 2015 when legislation was approved related
to the Metals Company, said the firm’s presence in the country was nominal. “They
have so far funded a few scholarships and
small projects, trying to buy their way in to get us on board,” he said. “But it
has not amounted to much.”
A spokesman
for the company said it donated a total of $140,600 last
year to support community and social programs in Nauru and Tonga. The spokesman
added that the contracts left the islands in “effective control” because their environmental
agencies have regulatory oversight.
Klaas Willaert, an international maritime lawyer who has served as a
Belgian delegate to the Seabed Authority, denounced the arrangements.
“They
are relying on a legal loophole here,” Mr. Willaert said.
“They have chosen tiny islands to gain access to the reserved areas. It is exactly
the opposite of what the law of the sea intended.”
‘Inconsistent
Application of Policies’
Chris
G. Brown spent
several years helping draft mining regulations
as an employee and consultant at the agency. He now works as a consultant to Nauru,
the Metals Company partner.
Charles
Morgan, an environmental scientist, was retained by the authority to study
data collected by early explorers of the proposed mining areas.
Later, he was hired by a firm whose assets are now controlled by the Metals Company
to secure a piece of that
data
for business purposes.
Nathan
Eastwood, a mining industry lawyer at London-based Clifford Chance, took a sabbatical
from his law firm last year to help the Seabed Authority draft
mining regulations even as he
continued to solicit
future seabed-mining clients for his firm, the I.S.A. documents and
other records show. He did not respond to requests for comment.
In interviews,
some staff members said that close industry ties permeated the agency and contributed
to a poisonous work environment. Internal emails and surveys also document the discontent.
“The
current culture/organizational dynamics have resulted in frustration, resentment,
and made the workplace an unpleasant (and often toxic) place to be,” said
an email in 2018 that was based on a survey of 31 staff members.
“Breakdowns
in communication, lack of transparency, fear of retaliation, not feeling valued,
nepotism, clashing personalities, inconsistent application of policies, and often
uncertainty around direction and vision (among other things) have contributed to
the current state,” it said.
A survey
in 2019 reached the “disheartening” conclusion that “many,
if not all, of the issues and frustrations you faced a year ago
are still present today.”
Employees
said they had no way to seek redress. “There is no internal hotline,” Andrew Webster,
then a senior executive helping oversee the agency’s budget, wrote in an email in
2019. “No whistleblower hotline.”
In the
statement to The Times, the law firm for the authority said that “continuous efforts
are being made to ensure the consistent application of policies across the organization.”
Since Mr. Lodge took over the agency in 2017, the statement said, he has revamped
personnel rules, “successfully and radically improving the working lives and the
morale of the I.S.A.’s valued and dedicated employees.”
Mr. Lodge
has been a flash point for some. Employees cited the acquisition last year of an
Audi SUV to drive him around Kingston even though he had
warned months earlier that budget cuts were likely to “seriously
impact the Authority’s ability to carry out its operations.”
He also
expensed airfare and related bills totaling as much as $50,000 per trip for him
and his family to travel on vacations over the last decade as part of authorized
home leaves to locations in Asia, according to an agency document.
In the
statement, the law firm said that Mr. Lodge’s agency-funded travel and the purchase
of the new agency car had all been properly approved and were “fully in line with
U.N. standards.”
“The
independent auditors examine all expenditures and are required to report any cases
of fraud, wasteful or improper expenditure, or expenditure in breach of the rules,”
the statement said, “and no such expenditure has ever been reported.”
Some
current and former employees said the workplace dysfunction signaled an inability
to fulfill the agency’s core mission of benefiting “the common heritage of mankind.”
“The
organization simply does not have the capacity necessary to perform such functions,”
Van Khanh Nguyen, a finance officer between 2018 and 2020,
said in an interview, during which she detailed a series of financial misdeeds she
said she observed while at the agency. She was among several
former employees who recently filed personnel complaints with
the U.N. “What they care about is their own benefit, and corruption is everywhere.”
‘Dollar
Signs in Their Eyes’
Scientists
say that more
is known about the surface of the moon than about the floor of the
ocean, with much of it still unmapped, and estimate that perhaps 90
percent of the species at the bottom of the Pacific remain unclassified.
Worries
about that knowledge gap emerged publicly last year when the Metals Company submitted
plans to test a new mining machine.
The company
had teamed up with Allseas, the offshore oil contractor,
to equip a
former drill ship with a device resembling a bulldozer that vacuums
up nodules. The machine
has been tested in the North Sea, but the Metals Company wants
a separate trial in the Clarion-Clipperton Zone so it
can demonstrate what, it predicts, will be limited consequences for aquatic life
as it collects about 3,600 tons of nodules. Ultimately, once commercial mining starts,
it intends to extract 1.3
million tons of these rocks a year at its first site.
The Metals
Company has pushed ahead with its plans even as the company has shown signs of financial
challenges, with its stock
price falling from a high of $15.39 last year to a low of 81 cents
on Friday.
The company’s
request is still under review, having elicited sharp criticism around the world,
including from the governments of Britain and
Germany, and
from some scientists who once held top posts at the Seabed Authority.
These
questions echo larger concerns about the harm some scientists fear large-scale seabed
mining may cause. The most prominent opponent may be Craig Smith, an oceanographer
and former mining industry contractor now at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. He spent nearly five years at sea and in Antarctica studying
marine life, and his research has singled out the Clarion-Clipperton
Zone as something worth preserving.
“It’s
just not possible to do this without essentially destroying one of the largest wilderness
areas left,” said Dr. Smith, citing the potential impact of 17 different mining
projects in the area, including the three contracts held by the Metals Company.
Dr. Smith was
hired to evaluate the environmental effects of seabed mining by the
South Korean government and Lockheed Martin, the American contractor, which are
considering projects of their own.
“These
are some of the most pristine, biodiverse habitats on a planet where we already
have a biodiversity crisis because of destruction on land,” he said.
Mr. McFarlane,
the former head of environmental monitoring at the Seabed Authority, suggested that
the Metals Company was intentionally playing down the threat.
“I’ve listened to his greenwashing,” Mr. McFarlane
said of Mr. Barron, the chief executive. “This guy is slick, but he is like a lot
of people who see dollar signs in their eyes.”
Mr. Barron
said that such criticism was off base and that his project was extremely important
to the future health of the planet: “This could be one of those projects that could
really make a difference — that could really move the needle.”
His company’s
most immediate request is for approval to test its new nodule collector. After pushback
from governments and environmental groups about its proposal, the
company supplemented its filing with the Seabed Authority with additional
environmental data.
“Picking
up the nodules from the seabed has to be accomplished with the maximum efficiency
and minimum disturbance,” Jon Machin, a former offshore-drilling executive who now
serves as the company’s head of engineering, said at a briefing in June.
The effort,
according to the company, would include a continuous environmental monitoring system
that would allow the crew to redirect the mining if sediment plumes or other harm
occurs.
In an
interview, Mr. Lodge lashed out at the scientists voicing concerns, suggesting there
was a “very incestuous” financial relationship between them and the environmental
activist groups.
“If you
spend your whole life studying the worms that live on nodules, then you get very
attached to that,” Mr. Lodge said. “And I’m not sure that they really see the woods
for the trees. The broader issue is: Where are you going to get these minerals from?”
The Seabed
Authority, nonetheless, has taken significant steps to limit
harm, including setting aside about 40
percent of the Clarion-Clipperton Zone,
760,000 square
miles, as areas where mining will not be allowed.
At the
meeting of the authority’s governing council in December, proponents and opponents
of the Metals Company’s plans reached a compromise to speed up the review of the
comprehensive seabed mining rules, sticking with the firm’s proposed timeline to
start commercial operations as early as 2024.
“Consensus
means that everybody is slightly unhappy,” Mr. Lodge told the council.