Sunday, July 09, 2023

Nauru prepares to mine deep seas in big climate controversy

Nauru sees rare earth metals as key to the green transition. But mining them could threaten vital marine ecosystems.


Several businesses have joined environmental activists to denounce the controversial idea of deep sea mining
 [Gustavo Graf/Reuters]

Nauru is a small Pacific island 4,000km (2,485 miles) off the coast of Australia. It is so small, it has no capital city and just one road. But its roughly 12,000 inhabitants are at the heart of a conflict over mining the world’s sea beds for precious minerals.

The clash pits differing views about how to tackle climate change. Nauru’s government sees rare earth metals as a key component in the green energy transition. However, conservationists argue that mining the ocean floor will threaten vital marine ecosystems.

Deep-sea mining involves hoovering poly-metallic nodules – resembling potato-sized nuggets – off the ocean floor and piping them up to vessels on the water’s surface. These nodules contain copper, lithium and other treasured elements.

Advocates for the controversial practice contend that terrestrial mining will soon fall short of the demand for rare earth metals, particularly cobalt and nickel, which are needed to power “green” storage batteries and ensure a shift away from fossil fuels.

According to the International Energy Agency, the surge of battery technology in electric cars, solar panels and wind turbines, resulting from a push to meet the Paris Climate Agreement, will see global mineral demand increase four-fold by 2040.

“The green energy transition will require an enormous amount of storage capacity,” said Jeroen Hagelstein of Allseas, a Swiss subsea contractor. “Metals on the seabed can help meet those needs.”

“Sea mining also leaves a smaller carbon footprint than on land, with fewer impacts on humans,” he said, adding that companies intend to maintain the highest environmental standards and operate within guidelines laid out by regulatory bodies

Environmentalists, however, warn that deep-sea mining poses an existential threat to fragile marine ecosystems. Ancient lifeforms like polychaete worms, dumbo octopuses and twilight zone corals are at risk from dredging.

Deep-water industrial noise would also distort communication between whales, prompting distress and interrupting feeding patterns. Elsewhere, plumes of sediment laced with toxic metals could spiral upwards from seafloor vehicles, contaminating marine food chains.

“Deep-sea habitats are largely unknown. We do know that they take millennia to evolve and can take seconds to destroy. Who knows how long it would take to reestablish dynamic ecosystems once the mining has finished?” asked Jessica Battle, a senior expert on global ocean policy at the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF).

Environmental groups are not alone in denouncing the practice. In March 2021, BMW, Volvo and Samsung, among others, joined the WWF in calling for a moratorium on deep-sea mining until the ecological risks are better understood.

Today, opponents are mobilising around the International Seabed Authority (ISA) – a United Nations-backed regulator established in 1994 to protect the seabed and regulate mining activities in areas beyond national jurisdictions or in international waters.

A fisherman is pictured at sunset at the northern end of the airport runway on the small nation island of Nauru
The ISA may be forced to accept Nauru’s application to start activities this summer [File: Rod Henshaw/Reuters]

Since 2001, the ISA has approved 31 exploration licences. Mining permits, however, have not yet been authorised. That could change this month as Nauru triggered an obscure legal provision two years ago that may allow it to start mining soon.

Under that legal sub-clause in the UN’s Law of the Sea, if a country applies to start deep-sea mining, the ISA has two years to finalise a rulebook for commercial deep-sea mining activities.

If there is no rulebook, mining can start. The loophole expires on July 9. In theory, mining applications can start after that

Over the past 23 months, negotiations have failed to result in a mining code. The ISA may be forced to accept Nauru’s application to start activities this summer (via a subsidiary of The Metals Company, a Canadian firm) even in the absence of industry regulations.

Internal disputes

“Nauru’s application could be provisionally approved,” said Costa Rica’s Permanent Representative to the ISA Gina Guillen Grillo. “Among other requirements, however, it would need to submit an environmental impact statement. Right now, we have no internal process to assess this first step.”

She added that “plenty of member states feel the ISA is under no obligation to approve mining applications until robust regulations with environmental safeguards are in place. And we’re still several years away from that.”

Under existing rules, a mining application must be approved by the ISA’s Legal and Technical Commission (LTC), which then issues recommendations to the body’s ruling council. For a licence to be granted, it would need the support of one-third of the council’s 36 members.

“The council could instruct the LTC not to issue any recommendations before a mining code is established, essentially stopping the process in its tracks bureaucratically,” Ms Guillen Grillo added.

“For now, we continue to work under the principles of consensus and preserving the common heritage of mankind. Decisions about deep-sea mining cannot be rushed to meet some arbitrary deadline,” she said.

Internal disputes are a measure of the tensions hanging over the agency amid pressure from some members to slow down ocean mining, while others want it sped up.

Norway’s government is readying plans to license exploration applications. Chinese vessels, meanwhile, have been prospecting the ocean floor for decades. In contrast, Germany and Costa Rica have advocated for a temporary pause of the practice, citing a lack of scientific impact data.

Looking ahead, Nauru’s actions may prompt other countries to begin applying for licences in July. This has triggered consternation among environmentalists who fear the possibility of a commercial race to the bottom of the ocean.

“Nauru’s legal loophole is small, not big,” said the WWF’s Battle. “We’re hopeful that licences won’t be granted anytime soon and that a moratorium on deep-sea mining will be implemented to help safeguard the health of our seas, rather than use them as a source of short-term profit.”

The government of Nauru’s information office did not respond to multiple requests for comment by Al Jazeera.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA

Why has a Canadian company partnered with the tiny island of Nauru to fast-track deep-sea mining?

https://plawiuk.blogspot.com/2023/02/why-has-canadian-company-partnered-with.html

A leaked video of ocean pollution during a trial by The Metals Company (TMC) has renewed calls for a ban on deep-sea mining

Tree planter stable after suspected grizzly bear attack in northern B.C., conservation officer service says

Serious attacks on treeplanters 'very rare,' safety advocate says

A grizzly bear captured by a wildlife camera in Manitoba in May 2020. The B.C. Conservation Officer Service says it believes a grizzly bear attacked a treeplanter near Tumbler Ridge, B.C., on Thursday. (Submitted by Douglas Clark, University of Saskatchewan)

Conservation officers are investigating after a tree planter was attacked by a bear in northeastern B.C.

A brief statement from the Conservation Officer Service said the attack happened on Thursday, near Tumbler Ridge. 

Paramedics were called to the Thunder Mountain area just after 3 p.m., according to B.C. Emergency Health Services.

Earlier, a spokesperson said the victim was airlifted to hospital in Prince George in stable condition. On Friday, the service said the 21-year-old woman remained in hospital in stable condition.

 

In a written statement, they said she had been planting trees southwest of Bearhole Lake Provincial Park at around 3 p.m. when the bear bluff-charged, prompting the woman to move to a nearby road, at which point the bear attacked.

A co-worker was able to call for help after the bear ran off.

"At this time, conservation officers do not have conclusive physical evidence but believe the attack involved a grizzly bear," the statement says.

No trapping efforts underway

The service says that due to the nature of the attack and the remote location of where it occurred, they do not believe there is a public safety risk and no efforts are underway to trap the bear.

Serious bear attacks involving tree planters are uncommon given teams run into wildlife in the backcountry on a regular basis.

"It's a very rare occurrence. There have been minor events involving swat or nip but nothing involving an airlift since 1991 to my knowledge in British Columbia," said Jordan Tesluk, who's been working in forestry and safety advocacy for silviculture and forestry in B.C. for the last 30 years.

"Usually bears aren't interested and want to make themselves scarce."

The conservation officer service is reminding anyone travelling in or near the wilderness to take precautions including carrying bear spray, travelling in groups and keeping pets on leash.

With files from The Canadian Press

Twitter Blue accounts fuel Ukraine War misinformation

  • Published
IMAGE SOURCE,REUTERS

False and misleading posts about the Ukraine conflict continue to go viral on major social media platforms, as Russia's invasion of the country extends beyond 500 days.

Some of the most widely shared examples can be found on Twitter, posted by subscribers with a blue tick, who pay for their content to be promoted to other users.

Weapons for Ukraine not used in French riots

Many misleading posts have been shared online about the recent riots in France, but one viral post last week focused on US military aid to Ukraine.

It featured a screenshot of what appeared to be a headline from a news website, along with an image of two rifles.

"French police are fired upon with American rifles that may have come from Ukraine," reads the headline.

IMAGE SOURCE,TWITTER

Several Twitter accounts with Blue subscriptions have shared the post, which has been viewed more than a million times.

BBC Verify has traced it back to pro-Kremlin channels on the Telegram messaging app. The image used in the post appears in a Russian military blog from 2012 about a shooting competition held on a firing range near Moscow.

We have also been unable to find any online articles with the headline and picture as above, and there is no evidence any weapons provided to Ukraine by the US have been used during the recent unrest in France.

No evidence of 'baby factories' in Ukraine

Several Twitter accounts with a blue tick have recently promoted a claim that Russia has discovered "baby factories" in Ukraine.

Children between the ages of two and seven are said to be "factory farmed", and either sent to "child sex brothels" or to have their organs harvested and sold in the West.

IMAGE SOURCE,TWITTER

BBC Verify has traced the origin of the claim to an article published in March by The People's Voice, an alternative name for YourNewsWire, which has been described by fact-checking organisations as one of the biggest producers of fake news on the internet.

It has previously promoted a wide range of false and misleading stories, including anti-vaccine conspiracy theories and false claims about the 2017 mass shooting in Las Vegas.

The Russian government and Kremlin-controlled media have a history of promoting unsubstantiated claims about illegal organ harvesting in Ukraine.

Kramatorsk missile not Ukrainian

In the immediate aftermath of the attack, a post by an account with a Twitter Blue subscription, which positions itself as a legitimate news source, claimed the strike was mistakenly launched by Ukraine and hit a military barracks housing Nato troops and foreign mercenaries.

IMAGE SOURCE,TWITTER

"Storm Shadow missile suddenly changed trajectory dramatically, hitting Kramatorsk obliterated a Ukrainian military barracks housing foreign soldiers and mercenaries," the tweet claimed.

The post was viewed more than a million times.

There is no evidence that a missile launched by Ukrainian forces was responsible, nor that a military barracks was hit.

Zelensky has not cancelled elections

Posts claiming Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has "cancelled" elections in Ukraine have recently gone viral on Twitter.

Asked whether there will be elections in Ukraine next year, Mr Zelensky responded: "If we win [the war], there will be. It means there will be no martial law, no war. Elections must be held in peacetime, when there is no war, according to the law."

Commenting on the statement, former Fox News host Tucker Carlson, who's been critical of US aid for Ukraine, said in his recently launched Twitter show that Mr Zelensky's comments proved he'd ended democracy in Ukraine.

Twitter Blue accounts on a similar theme have been shared hundreds of thousands of times.

IMAGE SOURCE,TWITTER

The Ukrainian constitution prohibits the dissolution of parliament and national elections during martial law, meaning the current president and parliament will remain in charge until the period of martial law comes to an end.

Oleksii Danilov, secretary of Ukraine's national security and defence council, recently confirmed that based on the Ukrainian constitution, "no elections can take place" while martial law is in effect in the country.

Contacted by BBC Verify for a response to the false and misleading Twitter Blue posts highlighted in this article, Twitter's press office acknowledged receipt of our enquiry, but declined to comment.

Man fails to rob nail salon after customers ignore him and the footage is hilarious

Jul 7 2023,

11Alive/YouTube

A failed robbery at an Atlanta, Georgia, nail salon was caught on camera, and the internet is having a field day roasting the alleged burglar.

The attempted robbery occurred on Monday, July 3, at Nail1st. Crime Stoppers Atlanta released CCTV footage on Thursday to help search for the suspect, reported local media.

The video shows a man wearing a blue baseball hat, black shirt, sunglasses and light blue jeans entering the salon around 2:35 pm.

“Everybody get down!” he yells. One of his hands is inside a bag, which he points at people. “Give me all your money!”

A row of customers sitting to his right barely flinches as he screams, “Empty out your pockets!”

The phone rings at the cash register and an employee answers. The robber turns to the worker and tells them to “get down!” and “grab the money!” but the employee continues to take the call.

One of the patrons sitting at the front of the salon gets up to leave.

“Give me your money! Where’s the money?” the thief yells at her. She seems to reply, “I don’t have any,” as she casually walks out the door.

“Everybody, give me everything!” he says to no reaction from the clientele.

He tries yelling a couple more times, looking around for any reaction, then gives up and dejectedly walks out of the door.

The customer that got up earlier is standing outside. In one last-ditch effort, he says, “Give me your money,” to which she replies in an annoyed tone, “I don’t have any!”



The video is circulating social media, and people have been dragging the not-so-successful robber online.

“Lmfao, this is great! I’m glad everyone is okay. He thought he was going to leave wealthy, but he left broke AND feeling stupid,” commented one person.

“Never thought I’d feel bad for a criminal, but here we are,” added another person.

One Twitter user said the lack of reaction indicates how bad the current economy is.

“You know the economy is bad when not even gunpoint can make you give up the little you have,” reads the tweet.

Another person thinks the customers handled the situation effectively. “Do y’all see how minding your business can literally save your life?”

One commenter had some feedback for the alleged robber. “He should’ve said it’s a prank! To save himself from embarrassment.”

While the internet is making light of the situation, the Atlanta Police Department is still looking for the suspect.

Authorities urge anyone who recognizes the person in the video or has any relevant information to come forward.

Tips can be submitted anonymously to the Crime Stoppers Atlanta tip line at 404-577-TIPS (8477) or online here.

Those providing information leading to the arrest and indictment of the suspect may be eligible for a reward of up to $2,000.