Deep sea science is the proper investment.
On July 20, 2014 I posted the short three-paragraph article below (italics) and titled "Investing in the future" I now add two paragraphs to my thoughts after reading something new.
Opposition to experimental seabed mining should be viewed as investing in our future including our environment. We must not accept to be the guinea pig , but pass it on to more technologically advanced countries and we learn from them. Why should technologically advanced countries choose a country that is least in technological developments by its own citizens and institutions? It is not morally proper and lacks moral conscience.
China and India are two of the leading countries in knowledge and technology on seabed mining and have been major participants in international conferences. The experiments should be carried out in their waters, not in Papua New Guinea. Nautilus is a Canadian company and therefore must carry out this seabed mining experiment in its own waters.
Experimental Seabed Mining must be carried out in the waters of the technologically advanced countries and countries like Papua New Guinea then can learn from this and prepare to go into seabed mining in the future. Preparation should include introducing seabed mining into appropriate tertiary institutions ' curriculum as well as expanding marine biology and other marine science related courses.
Now in 2017 it is interesting to read (Papua New Guinea Mine Watch, May 10 2017) about India investing millions of dollars on seabed mining which is part of its "deep ocean mission". India's"deep ocean mission" is not limited to extracting minerals from the seabed but includes desalination, deep ocean energy, and deep sea science and fisheries.
Papua New Guinea must put a stop to seabed mining, reverse decisions and all other agreements and educate itself by observing India's "deep ocean mission" for the next ten years. Then after it has learnt anything useful, it may decide to proceed or leave the deep sea alone. Right now PNG should seriously consider establishing deep sea science and fisheries to enable us to understand the deep sea better before venturing into seabed mining. Deep sea science would be the proper investment before anything else.
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