Jacob Wiencek is chair of the Hawaii State Federation of Young Republicans and a former member of the Waikiki Neighborhood Board. The views expressed here are strictly his own.
Thousands of good jobs and long sought economic diversification are on the table.
The is accelerating worldwide, especially . Fueling this transition will be large amounts of rare earth elements (REE) necessary to develop advanced energy technology, especially for .
Presently, REE are largely coming from controversial and Chinese-dominated that threaten the sustainability of the clean energy transition. This convergence of the energy-economy demand to fight climate and geo-strategic interests presents a major opportunity for Hawaii to benefit, if we decide to take it.
The clean energy transition without a major increase in REE availability. Deep sea mining the current lack of resources necessary to transition the global economy away from fossil fuels.
This will likely be an industry that generates in wealth for all socio-economic groups. Thousands of good paying jobs and long sought economic diversification away from tourism are on the table for us. Our position about 800 miles north of the Clarion-Clipperton Zone positions Hawaii to be one of the key global players for REE production and trade.
Capitalizing on the benefits of deep sea mining will require proactive, forward-thinking leadership that has largely been absent from Hawaii over the preceding generation. The most immediate challenge comes from , filed in the 2023 state legislative session.
This bill would prohibit deep sea mining in Hawaii鈥檚 immediate waters and has the potential to send a very negative signal abroad that Hawaii is closed to future opportunity. If the state Legislature erroneously passes the bill this session, the governor must veto it.
On the federal level, Rep. Ed Case of Hawaii introduced legislation in Congress last year to on deep sea mining. This type of moratorium could become a de facto ban given the strength of far left-wing environmental groups in the Democratic Party coalition.
Instead, Hawaii and U.S. lawmakers need to be engaged and planning for the smooth facilitation of deep-sea mining. Rather than trying to develop our undersea resources our state leaders should be figuring out how to maximize the benefits.
UH A Global Leader
The University of Hawaii Manoa is already in marine and environmental science research. Let鈥檚 further develop that baseline to build a specialized, talented workforce at all levels that can support deep-sea mining.
Instead of introducing moratoriums that further isolate the U.S. from international rule-making, our senators should push for ratification of the . Lack of U.S. ratification of this treaty leaves us without a voice in setting regulations and potentially of benefiting from deep sea mining.
Other countries and companies on the U.S. or Hawaii to get their act together. They鈥檙e already moving. Canadian-based The Metals Company is only an early entrant to the rapidly emerging deep sea mining industry.
The U.S. and China are engaged in an all-encompassing great power competition where the latter鈥檚 dominance of existing REE supply chains is already posing serious strategic for the Free World. China鈥檚 greater and willing participation in international rulemaking bodies has given them a dominant position throughout the Indo-Pacific.
It鈥檚 plainly na茂ve to believe opposition to deep-sea mining will stop it from happening. China鈥檚 push for greater influence throughout Micronesia, strategic partnerships to enhance their REE dominance, is a direct challenge to the U.S. led free and open .
There is no ignoring the significant environmental challenges we are facing with impending deep-sea mining. But moratoriums or prohibitions are perhaps the most counterproductive way to respond.
It鈥檚 na茂ve to think unilateral U.S. or state-based restrictions will deter the major world powers from developing their undersea resources. Developing Micronesian states are already eagerly searching for partners to exploit the resources they control.
Fortunately, there are resources available we can leverage. The U.S. Defense Department is already committing to strengthen REE supply chains for vital national security reasons.
Additionally, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is one of the leading civilian agencies the potential impacts of deep-sea mining. Our members of Congress in Washington should be bolstering these disparate initiatives, especially with a view towards strengthening Hawaii as a global REE supply chain node.
Like it or not, deep-sea mining will soon be a reality and we in Hawaii have a choice on what to do about it. No is likely to be effective. China partnering with developing states will move ahead and exploit our undersea resources; and China鈥檚 already crafting international rules to loosen environmental constraints in deep-sea mining.
Passing on deep-sea mining means passing on diversifying our economy, enhancing our resiliency, powering the clean energy transition, and providing thousands of good paying that otherwise will not exist.
If we want to prioritize the status quo and not challenge ourselves then we鈥檙e implicitly choosing to maintain the dominant position of the tourism industry with its ecosystem of mostly low wage and low skill jobs. We will let China and others reap the benefits.
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Jacob Wiencek is chair of the Hawaii State Federation of Young Republicans and a former member of the Waikiki Neighborhood Board. The views expressed here are strictly his own.
There is nothing new about the grand idea of deep-sea mining (manganese nodules, anyone remember this?), however, it has been shown repeatedly to be economically unfeasible (i.e., it's to expensive to be worth it) and hundreds of jobs? Ridiculous. Of course the health of the ocean and our fisheries is far more important economically, culturally, etc. How about reducing our dependency on these materials?
Logical·
1 year ago
Mining the deep sea is a terrible idea and for once the planet needs to agree on something and ban it everywhere. Given where we are today suggesting this or worse, doing it, is complete insanity.
PackBacker·
1 year ago
It may be, but not in, or near Hawaii. Like Mauna Kea, there are many opposed to DSM and it will not fly without much controversy here. In other words, good luck, but it won't work, or be a factor.
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