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Protecting Africa’s Ocean Future and Why a Precautionary Pause on Deep-sea Mining Matters VICTORIA, Seychelles, February 3 (IPS) - The world is entering a decisive period for the future of the ocean. With the High Seas Treaty coming into force and meaningful progress being made on the World Trade Organization Agreement on Fisheries Subsidies, global momentum for stronger marine governance is building. Yet, new pressures linked to the push for deep-sea mining — the extraction of minerals from seabed thousands of meters below the ocean surface — threaten to undermine these gains. To safeguard progress, global decision-making will have to keep pace with such emerging risks. In this context, Africa will host several global discussions in 2026, including those that will shape the ocean’s future, with a series of opportunities for leadership starting with the African Union Summit in February to the Our Ocean Conference in Mombasa, Kenya in June.

Protecting Africa’s #Ocean Future and Why a Precautionary Pause on Deep-sea Mining Matters

#DeepSeaMiningPause
#HighSeasTreaty
#SaveOurOcean
#ProtectTheSeas
#MarineBiodiversity

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Deep-sea must not turn into ‘Wild West’ of rare minerals exploitation, agency head says Nations are pursuing underwater exploration for highly sought-after rare earth minerals, but the head of the UN’s International Seabed Authority (ISA) said the deep-sea belongs to no single country or corporation as efforts are underway to ensure this rich resource will not become “the Wild West” of exploitation.

Deep-sea must not turn into ‘Wild West’ of rare minerals exploitation, agency head says

#NoWildWestMining #DeepSeaMining #ProtectTheSeas #SustainableOceans #RareEarthMinerals #UNConventionOnTheLawOfTheSea #InternationalSeabedAuthority

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