welcome
ScienceDaily

ScienceDaily

Science

Science

Deep-sea mining risks leads study to urge shift to circular solutions

ScienceDaily
Summary
Nutrition label

81% Informative

Deep sea mining operations are expected to increase the negative impact on environmental indicators by up to 13 per cent , a change categorized as having 'great' significance, relative to the 'without' DSM scenario.

DSM operations will increase coastal vulnerability, pollution, and biodiversity loss.

The potential liabilities inherent in DSM activities necessitate a reassessment of current insurance models.

Deep-sea mining activities can create sediment plumes, introduce noise and light pollution, and discharge water with higher concentrations of metals.

The study advocates for a shift toward circular economy strategies, such as enhanced recycling and urban mining, which offer sustainable alternatives to DSM .

These approaches could reduce the risk exposure that all parties currently face, by mitigating the environmental and economic uncertainties linked to deep sea mining operations.

VR Score

91

Informative language

97

Neutral language

60

Article tone

formal

Language

English

Language complexity

82

Offensive language

not offensive

Hate speech

not hateful

Attention-grabbing headline

not detected

Known propaganda techniques

not detected

Time-value

long-living

External references

no external sources

Source diversity

no sources

Affiliate links

no affiliate links

Small business owner?

Otherweb launches Autoblogger—a revolutionary way to bring more leads to any small business, using the power of AI.