Highlights
- Deep Sea Minerals Corp. has initiated engagement with NOAA as a preliminary step toward applying for a U.S. deep-sea mining license, representing regulatory positioning rather than project approval or resource confirmation.
- The company targets polymetallic nodules containing nickel, cobalt, copper, and manganese for battery technologies, but these deposits generally lack significant rare earth elements.
- Despite decades of discussion, no commercial deep-sea mining operation has achieved sustained production globally, making this sector highly speculative with unresolved environmental, regulatory, and cost challenges.
Deep Sea Minerals Corp. (opens in a new tab) (CSE: SEAS; OTCQB: DSEAF; FSE: X45), a Vancouver-based subsea mineral exploration company, announced it has begun engagement with the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) (opens in a new tab) as a preliminary step toward applying for a deep-sea mining license under U.S. law. The move signals the company’s intention to pursue polymetallic nodule resources that may contain metals used in batteries, industrial manufacturing, and defense technologies. For investors tracking critical mineral supply chains, the announcement is notable—but it represents a proceduralmilestone rather than a confirmed resource discovery, project approval,or commercial mining operation.
Manganese Nodules

A Regulatory Door Opens—But Only Slightly
The company stated it has initiated early engagement with NOAA, the agency responsible for administering seabed mining licenses under the U.S. Deep Seabed Hard Mineral Resources Act (DSHMRA (opens in a new tab)). According to the company, this step is intended to position the firm within the U.S. regulatory process as it prepares a formal license application.
CEO James Deckelman (opens in a new tab) described the move as a commitment to developing critical mineral assets within a “transparent and predictable” U.S. regulatory framework. However, the company has not announced the submission of an application yet—only its intention to proceed. Investors should understand that this stage represents regulatory positioning rather than project approval.
Treasure on the Seafloor—or Just a Geological Possibility?
The company’s strategy centers on exploring polymetallic nodules, seabed formations that may contain nickel, cobalt, copper, and manganese. These metals are important to electric vehicle batteries and other clean energy technologies.
What is notable from a Rare Earth Exchanges™ perspective is what these deposits generally do not contain in meaningful quantities: rare earth elements. Polymetallic nodules are not considered a significant rare earth source, meaning the implications for the rare earth supply chain itself are limited. The relevance lies more in broader critical mineral markets tied to electrification technologies.
Between the Lines: A Promotional Tone Without Hard Data
The announcement contains several hallmarks of early-stage exploration communications:
- No exploration license has yet been granted
- No specific project area or resource estimate was disclosed
- No feasibility study or economic model was presented
- No timeline for regulatory approval was provided
References to supporting “AI-related supply chains” appear speculative and typical of promotional language used across the junior mining sector.
Deep-Sea Mining: A Sector Long on Vision, Short on Production
Despite decades of discussion, no commercial deep-sea mining operation has successfully entered sustained production anywhere in the world. Environmental concerns, unresolved international regulatory frameworks, and extremely high technical costs continue to slow development.
For investors, the sector remains largely speculative.
Bottom Line for Rare Earth Exchanges Readers
Deep Sea Minerals’ engagement with NOAA shows that companies are positioning themselves early for potential seabed resource development. But at this stage, the announcement should be viewed as a regulatory opening move—not a miningbreakthrough.
The deep ocean may hold minerals. Turning them into profitable supply chains remains one of the mining industry’s most uncertain frontiers.
Sources
Deep Sea Minerals Corp. press release, March 3, 2026
Mining Weekly: “Canadian company applies to the U.S. government for deep-sea mining license.”
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