Mining Mirror February 2018 | Page 27

Mining in focus Another storm is brewing in the Cape as continental shelf mining becomes more attractive, writes Dr Nicolaas C Steenkamp. M arine mining in South Africa has been limited to the extraction of diamonds on the west coast and oil-and-gas exploration work. The issuing of three licences, which allowed for exploration work off the Western Cape coast, did not attract too much media attention when it was first granted almost five years ago. Environmentalists are concerned that the companies involved might now convert these exploration rights (which are about to expire) into mining rights. Three mining rights were granted, in 2012 and 2014, by the Department of Mineral Resources (DMR) to South African registered Green Flash Trading 251, Green Flash Trading 257 and Canadian company Diamond Fields International to prospect for marine phosphates, on claims covering more than 150 000km² or 10% of the country’s marine environment. Green Flash Trading 251 and 257’s prospecting rights includes area in the ocean off Adam se Baai and Cape Columbine / Infanta. All three prospecting rights extend from the northern reaches of the West Coast, down the West Coast to Cape Town, then around the peninsular and all the way to offshore Mossel Bay. The prospecting areas are located mostly in-depth contours of between 200m and 2 000m, with the shallowest depth at five metres. The World-Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) opposed the granting of the exploration licences to Green Flash Trading 251 and Green Flash Trading 257 in 2012. In a statement the WWF said that the Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) and the Environmental Management Plan were inadequate. ‘Should prospecting prove the economic viability of the resource a second full EIA must be conducted to evaluate all the potential impacts of producing the mineral from the sea floor before consideration could be given to permit the mining of the resource,’ the WWF states. Operation Phakisa The South African government’s Operation Phakisa: Ocean Economy plans to utilise the economic potential of the country’s marine environment through the rapid promotion of marine petroleum and minerals extraction. Ninety eight percent of South Africa’s Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) is currently being leased for offshore oil and gas exploration. As part of Phakisa, the government aims to fast-track the drilling of 30 wells in the next 10 years and develop infrastructure such as a phased gas pipeline network. It also includes offshore mineral sands mining and unconventional gas exploration and exploration of ferromanganese crust between South Africa and Madagascar. Operation Phakisa also relates to the establishment of marine transport and manufacture, offshore oil and gas, aquaculture and marine protection services. International water Worldwide there is an increased interest in marine mining. Globally, a large number of exploration licences have been awarded by the International Seabed Authority under the United Nations (UN) Law of the Sea covering large tracts of the seafloor in the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans, in areas that extend well beyond traditional national jurisdictions. The intergovernmental body, the Inter Ocean Metal Joint Organisation, was established in 1987 with the objective of exploring, prospecting and exploiting poly-metallic nodules in accordance with the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea. Six contractors from France, Russia, Japan, China, Korea and Germany, have been allowed to conduct exploration work in the Pacific, while India FEBRUARY 2018 MINING MIRROR [25]