Highlights
- The Trump administration is inviting industry interest in deep-sea mining for polymetallic nodules in Northern Mariana Islands and American Samoa.
- The goal is to secure critical minerals like nickel, cobalt, copper, and manganese for national security.
- BOEM's information-gathering phase is ongoing and does not yet constitute approval.
- Unresolved environmental concerns include sediment plumes, fisheries impacts, and ecosystem effects.
- There are active scientific debates surrounding these environmental concerns.
- Guam, Northern Marianas, and American Samoa are unified in opposition to the mining initiative.
- The territories are preparing legal challenges, which could introduce significant permitting and timeline risks.
- Despite the opposition, there is geopolitical urgency driving the initiative.
The Trump administration is reviving plans to explore deep-sea mining in U.S. Pacific territoriesโspecifically the Northern Mariana Islands and American Samoaโby inviting industry interest, speeding reviews, and expanding seabed mapping, arguing the move is needed to secure critical minerals for national security and advanced manufacturing. Reporting by Pacific Beat of ABC details (opens in a new tab) the process: an information request from the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management (opens in a new tab) (BOEM), streamlined environmental steps by ย National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (opens in a new tab) (NOAA), and new surveys. Whatโs clear is the intent; whatโs not is consent, science, or timing. No leases have been granted yetโand opposition across Pacific territories is unified, raising legal and schedule risk.
The Case the Coverage Gets Right
The minerals targetedโpolymetallic nodules containing nickel, cobalt, copper, and manganeseโare genuinely strategic for batteries, defense platforms, and grid infrastructure. Itโs also accurate, asย reported (opens in a new tab)ย byย ABC,ย that the U.S. is not a member of the UN-affiliated International Seabed Authority, meaning Washington is pursuing a domestic path rather than the ISA framework. Pacific territories host critical U.S. military assets, which explains the geopolitical urgency. The core premiseโover-reliance on China for critical minerals is a vulnerabilityโis widely accepted across allied capitals.
Where the Brakes Matter
The Australian media narrative leans toward inevitability; the facts do not. BOEM emphasizes that this phase is information-gathering, not approval. Environmental uncertainties remain unresolved: sediment plumes, fisheries impacts, and contested findings (including claims about oxygen generation by nodules) are active scientific debates, not settled conclusions. Crucially, Guam, the Northern Marianas, and American Samoa are aligned in opposition and are preparing legal challenges, introducing real permitting and timeline risk.
Rare Earths: Adjacent, Not the Target
Deep-sea nodules are not rare-earth deposits. Their relevance to rare earth supply chains is indirectโthese are battery metals, not neodymium, dysprosium, or terbium. The strategic parallel, however, is instructive: once again, policymakers are discovering that markets alone may not deliver resilient supply fast enough when security is at stake.
The Frame REEx has been pressed since 2024
Since late 2024, Rare Earth Exchangesโข has argued for coordinated allied industrial policyโprice mechanisms, stockpiles, talent/workforce development, downstream subsidies, shared infrastructureโat a scale not seen since WWII. Whether for seabed minerals or rare earth refining (especially heavy rare earth separation), outcomes will hinge on execution: durable rules, public consent, and science-based guardrails. Security premiums may emergeโbut only if policy earns legitimacy.
Source: Pacific Beat (ABC), Lucy Cooper & Doug Dingwall, January 31, 2026.
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