TY - JOUR
T1 - Sustainable and Just Deep-Sea Mining for the Energy Green Transition
T2 - A conundrum without Legal, Governance or Technological Solutions. The Case of the EU
AU - Cassotta, Sandra
AU - Goodsite, Michael Evan
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - In January 2023 the International Seabed Authority (ISA), an intergovernmental organization established under the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) granted already thirty contracts for exploration of Deep Seabed Mining, but exploitation has not started yet because ISA has not finalized its regulations, expected in 2025. This article intends to address to what extent is the current deep Seabed mining regime factoring risks and uncertainties in a just and sustainable manner in the current legal framework on environmental liability embedded in the green energy transition’s processes with the EU as case study and enquiry if there are baseline or best practice to learn from. It unravels which type of precautionary approach fits and is just. Deep Seabed Mining is also a social justice, ethical dilemma demanding equitable and share solutions to the benefit of current and future generations because activities of this kind can destroy ecosystems that can take decades to regenerate, if not causing irreversible damage. Law and technology, but also technology will be crucial as new methods guaranteeing an “environmental benign Deep Seabed Mining” will determine how liability law will be shaped.
AB - In January 2023 the International Seabed Authority (ISA), an intergovernmental organization established under the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) granted already thirty contracts for exploration of Deep Seabed Mining, but exploitation has not started yet because ISA has not finalized its regulations, expected in 2025. This article intends to address to what extent is the current deep Seabed mining regime factoring risks and uncertainties in a just and sustainable manner in the current legal framework on environmental liability embedded in the green energy transition’s processes with the EU as case study and enquiry if there are baseline or best practice to learn from. It unravels which type of precautionary approach fits and is just. Deep Seabed Mining is also a social justice, ethical dilemma demanding equitable and share solutions to the benefit of current and future generations because activities of this kind can destroy ecosystems that can take decades to regenerate, if not causing irreversible damage. Law and technology, but also technology will be crucial as new methods guaranteeing an “environmental benign Deep Seabed Mining” will determine how liability law will be shaped.
KW - Deep Sea Mining Law
KW - UNCLOS
KW - Green Energy Transition
KW - Sustainability
KW - Social justice
KW - environmental liability
KW - EU Green Deal
KW - Fit for 55
KW - Precautionary principle
KW - Precautionary Approach
U2 - 10.54648/eelr2023017
DO - 10.54648/eelr2023017
M3 - Review article
SN - 1879-3886
VL - 32
SP - 268
EP - 282
JO - European Energy and Environmental Law Review
JF - European Energy and Environmental Law Review
IS - 6
ER -