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Norway proposes opening Germany-sized area of its continental shelf to deep-sea mining

by Siddhi Ashar, May 10
1 minute read

Norway is moving forward with plans to mine its continental shelf to procure minerals critical for renewable energy technologies. The area holds considerable quantities of minerals needed for renewable energy technologies, such as magnesium, cobalt, copper, nickel and rare-earth metals.

lighted brown concrete buildings near body of water at nighttime

So what?

The move raises concerns about the potential environmental impacts on fragile deep-sea ecosystems and the lack of international regulations governing deep-sea mining activities.

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by Siddhi Ashar Spotted 48 signals

With a background in international studies and filmmaking, Siddhi works with the Futures Centre team to creatively push our current imaginaries and create more positive visions of futures rooted in equity. Her works centers around challenging common narratives and working agilely to bring forth more representative ones. Through her role at the Futures Centre, she focuses on the answering the question, how can better climate communication and visioning help stakeholders work together and act intently, empathetically and urgently?

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