Abstract | Interest in mining the deep seabed is not new; however, recent technological advances and increasing global demand for metals and rare-earth elements may make it economically viable in the near future ( 1). Since 2001, the International Seabed Authority (ISA) has granted 26 contracts (18 in the last 4 years) to explore for minerals on the deep seabed, encompassing ~1 million km2 in the Pacific, Atlantic, and Indian Oceans in areas beyond national jurisdiction ( 2). However, as fragile habitat structures and extremely slow recovery rates leave diverse deep-sea communities vulnerable to physical disturbances such as those caused by mining ( 3), the current regulatory framework could be improved. We offer recommendations to support the application of a precautionary approach when the ISA meets later this July. Deep-sea benthic ecosystems are globally important reservoirs of biodiversity and endemism that provide important ecosystem services (e.g., carbon sequestration and nutrient cycling) ( 4, 5) and include diverse habitats (e.g., soft-sediment abyssal plains, hydrothermal vents, seamounts, continental slopes, and submarine canyons) ( 6). The deep seabed also harbors substantial, untapped mineral resources (e.g., polymetallic nodules containing nickel, copper, cobalt, and lithium; massive sulfides containing copper and gold; and seamount crusts containing cobalt, manganese, and rare-earth minerals) ( 1, 7). The challenge ahead is to find ways to permit initial exploration, and ultimately commercial exploitation, of seabed minerals while sustaining the ecosystems that surround them. The seabed outs
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