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MONDAY 15 JULY — The future of deep sea mining will be a focus for world leaders from tonight as the International Seabed Authority (ISA) kicks off its 29th session in Kingston, Jamaica (11pm Monday AEST). Global leaders, including Pacific leaders and members of the Australian delegation, are expected to discuss the general policy of deep sea mining. 

Greenpeace Australia Pacific is calling on the Albanese government to support a moratorium on deep sea mining and join a growing number of countries (27), including a majority of Pacific governments, that are opposed to it.

So far, the ISA has granted 31 deep sea mining exploration contracts covering over 1.5 million km² of the world’s seabed – an area more than five times the size of New Zealand. Seventeen of these contracts cover exploration in the Pacific Ocean’s Clarion-Clipperton Zone (CCZ), an area between Hawaii and México and close to some Pacific Nations.

These contracts do not allow companies to mine but to explore and test-mine with a view to submitting an application for exploitation, which is what The Metals Company – headed by Australian businessman and CEO Gerard Barron – has already announced it plans to do in the Pacific Ocean this year.

Shiva Gounden, Head of Pacific at Greenpeace Australia Pacific, said:

“For Pasifika people, our deep connection to our Pacific Ocean goes beyond the physical proximity of where we are based. There is spiritual interconnectedness, interdependence, and relationship with our Moana, our Solwara, and our Wasawasa. Protecting it from extraction and material interests is the basis of our beings as Pasifika people.

“The ISA has been given the important responsibility to regulate and protect our deep oceans from exploitation, so you cannot have a UN body that has vested interests that hinder it from making impartial decisions based on ethics and the cultural human rights of our Pacific people.”

Tita Longopoa, Program Director at Civil Society Forum of Tonga, said:

“The ISA is the designated body to regulate any activity in the ocean beyond national jurisdiction, so given Tonga is a Sponsoring State of areas in the High Seas and a member, we are obligated to be guided by the ISA. Thus, it needs to be fit for purpose, balancing its responsibility to govern the resources as well as ensure the protection of our Ocean. If they are not fit for purpose, we will suffer.”

At the ISA meeting, Member States are expected to:

  • Continue negotiations on a consolidated text (draft regulations for a Mining Code)
  • Hold an election for the Secretary-General of the ISA
  • Potentially, for the first time in the ISA’s history, discuss the need for a General Policy on the protection and preservation of the marine environment – a similar discussion was blocked for the entire Assembly meeting last year.

Greenpeace will be on the ground in Kingston and can provide a range of Pasifika voices and Pacific climate leaders for interview on issues including:

  • The threats deep sea mining poses to Pasifika people and culture in the region
  • Australia’s role in uniting Pacific nations for a moratorium
  • The need for a new secretary general who will champion independent decision-making free from vested interests 
  • The importance of the independence of the governing body, which will decide on the future protection of the ocean and consequently the Pacific peoples and cultures

— ENDS —

To request an interview, please contact:

Kimberley Bernard on +61 407 581 404 or kimberley.bernard@greenpeace.org

Notes:

Recet coverage of former prime minister Scott Morrison’s involvement in deep sea mining can be read here with Greenpeace’s statement here

Images can be found here

The 29th session of the International Seabed Authority starts

Climate Change

How to Think About the Extractive Problem of Lithium Mining

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Electrification of transportation and the power grid all but require lithium to make batteries—but mining it takes a toll on delicate ecosystems. Still, there are reasons for hope.

From our collaborating partner Living on Earth, public radio’s environmental news magazine, an interview by Paloma Beltran with Thea Riofrancos, the author of “Extraction: The Frontiers of Green Capitalism.”

How to Think About the Extractive Problem of Lithium Mining

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New panel of climate scientists calls for fossil fuel transition roadmaps

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A new panel of experts, bringing together some of the world’s top climate scientists, has called on governments to develop roadmaps for phasing out fossil fuels “anchored in science and justice”.

Launched on Friday in Santa Marta, Colombia, along with a set of 12 initial policy recommendations, the panel’s appeal came ahead of a key ministerial meeting on equitable ways to reduce dependence on coal, oil and gas during next week’s “First Conference on Transitioning Away from Fossil Fuels”.

Sixty countries head to Santa Marta to cement coalition for fossil fuel transition

Presenting the panel’s recommendations in a packed Santa Marta Theatre, Johan Rockström, director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), said the push for a global transition away from fossil fuels offers “a light in the tunnel” during a “very dark moment” of geopolitical conflict and climate extremes.

“Science is here to serve,” Rockström said. “We’re today launching the Science Panel for the Global Energy Transition (SPGET) as a service, as a global common good for all countries, all sectors, all regions to connect to the best science enabling a transition away from fossil fuels.”

The panel is urging countries to create “whole-of-government” plans to “dismantle legal, financial and political barriers” to the energy transition. Its insights are intended to inform top officials from 57 governments who will gather in Santa Marta for high-level discussions on Tuesday and Wednesday.

Draft roadmap for Colombia

Colombian Environment Minister Irene Vélez Torres said the panel “addresses a longstanding shortcoming” in international climate science, by creating a scientific body dedicated solely to overcoming the world’s reliance on fossil fuels.

“It’s a first-of-its-kind, designed to organise in the next five years the scientific evidence that allows cities, regions, countries and coalitions to take the big leap,” Vélez told the event in Santa Marta.

As an example of how countries can move forward – even when their economies are closely tied to the production and use of dirty energy – a group of European scientists presented a draft roadmap to phase out fossil fuels in Colombia, with inputs from the Colombian government. It will be used as a basis for further consultation in the Latin American nation to define the way forward.

To phase out fossil fuels, developing countries need exit route from “debt trap”

Piers Forster, director of the Priestley Centre for Climate Futures at the University of Leeds and co‑author of the roadmap, said it shows “a clear pathway to economic and societal benefit”, with average annual investment of $10.6 billion producing net economic benefits of $23 billion per year by 2050.

The document says fossil fuels in Colombia can be phased out through energy efficiency measures, coupling renewable generation with energy storage, and switching to electrified transport. But, it adds, the government will need to plan for reduced revenue from fossil fuel exports, which roughly half by the mid-2030s.

“What matters now is moving beyond headline targets to create credible, policy-relevant roadmaps, enabling a just and effective transition,” Forster said in a statement. Brazil is also working on a national roadmap for its own economy, as well as leading a voluntary process to produce a global roadmap.

IPCC hobbled by politics

Currently, the world’s top climate science body – the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) – requires countries to sign off on each “summary for policymakers” of its flagship science reports. This has led to a politically fraught process that has increasingly seen some oil-producing governments making efforts to weaken its recommendations.

In a bid to focus scientific debates on the phase-out of fossil fuels, the new SPGET was created based on a mandate from last year’s COP30. It is also meant to come up with scientific recommendations at a faster pace than the IPCC’s seven-year cycle.

Natalie Jones, senior policy advisor at the International Institute of Sustainable Development (IISD), called the new scientific panel “historic”, as it will be “more specific, more targeted and potentially more agile” with its advice on phasing out coal, oil and gas than the IPCC’s exhaustive scientific synthesis reports.

Why the transition beyond fossil fuels depends on cities and collective action

One of the SPGET members, Peter Newell of the UK’s University of Sussex, said “there are many different challenges along the way – and not all of them have to do with lack of evidence”, but the phasing out of fossil fuels “is one part of the story and it’s important to address it”.

The panel will be co-chaired by Cameroonian economist Vera Songwe, PIK’s chief economist Ottmar Edenhofer and Gilberto M. Jannuzzi, professor of energy systems at Brazil’s Universidade Estadual de Campinas. It will be composed of between 50 and 100 scientists divided into four working groups: transition pathways, technological solutions, policies and finance.

Under the 12 insights for the Santa Marta process, the panel recommended banning new fossil fuel infrastructure, mandating “deep cuts” in methane emissions, implementing carbon levies on imports, and de-risking clean energy investments via interventions from central banks, among others.

The post New panel of climate scientists calls for fossil fuel transition roadmaps appeared first on Climate Home News.

New panel of climate scientists calls for fossil fuel transition roadmaps

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New loss and damage fund could run out of money next year

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Despite not yet paying out any money, a UN-backed fund meant to address the loss and damage caused to developing countries by climate change could face “liquidity issues” by the end of next year, its head warned today.

With ten projects already requesting $166 million in total, the fund’s Executive Director Ibrahima Cheikh Diong warned a board meeting in Zambia that the fund was likely to be “oversubscribed” and should anticipate cashflow problems.

A framing paper prepared by the fund’s secretariat similarly warns that “given the current status of the capitalization of the Fund, there is a risk of the Fund exhausting its capital by the end of 2027, which could result in a loss of operational momentum and expose the FRLD to reputational risk”.

Since governments agreed to set up the fund at UN climate talks in Egypt in 2022, wealthy nations have promised $822 million, but delivered just $449 million.

The fund is expected to approve its first projects at its next board meeting in July. Early proposals submitted include strengthening responses to floods in Bangladesh and the Nigerian city of Lagos, and improving water infrastructure in Jamaica following Hurricane Melissa last year.

A woman walks over debris, outside a store where food is being distributed, after Hurricane Melissa made landfall in Black River, Jamaica, October 30, 2025. (REUTERS/Octavio Jones )

Millions not billions

ActionAid Zambia climate justice coordinator Michael Mwansa told the board meeting that he was concerned about “the failure of the Global North governments to deliver on their climate finance obligations, making it largely impossible to scale up [the fund’s initial stage] significantly, if at all”.

“Pledges remain nowhere near the billions and even the trillions needed to address loss and damage to the Global South”, Mwansa added, highlighting reports which found that financing loss and damage could cost developing countries up to $400 billion a year.

The fund’s board discussed its strategy for raising more money at its meeting this week while climate campaigners called, in an open letter, for it to aim to secure $50 billion a year from developed countries starting next year, rising to $100 billion a year by 2031 and $400 billion by 2035.

The World Bank-hosted fund aims to have revenue-raising rounds known as replenishments every four years, with the first in 2027.

Governments have agreed to “urge” developed countries to contribute but only to “encourage” other nations to do so and the fund’s secretariat wants to appoint a “high-level champion” to lead the replenishment team.

The fundraising strategy will be discussed further at the next board meeting in the Philipines in June.

Campaigners’ open letter calls for developed countries to contribute more and for them to introduce taxes on fossil fuel companies, financial transactions, luxury air travel and wealth to raise money for the fund.

“Rich countries must be held strictly accountable for the devastation they have caused,” said Climate Action Network International head Tasneem Essop. “Their failure to fulfil their responsibility to the Loss and Damage Fund is not just an oversight; it is a shameful betrayal of humanity.”

The post New loss and damage fund could run out of money next year appeared first on Climate Home News.

New loss and damage fund could run out of money next year

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