Securing The Seabed: Australia’s Strategic Choices In Deep-Sea Mining

Authors

  • Tom Mitev Sea Power Centre-Australia Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.52307/h3kma464

Keywords:

Deep-sea mining, strategic reality, Decarbonisation, Environmental risk, Emerging pressures

Abstract

Deep-sea mining is accelerating from speculative ambition to strategic reality, carrying profound implications for Australia’s 
security, economy, and influence in the Pacific. With an estimated 8 to 20 trillion USD in critical minerals underpinning global 
decarbonisation, competition for the seabed is intensifying while legal uncertainty, environmental risk, and foreign-state ambitions threaten to reshape maritime power balances. For a nation whose prosperity relies on secure sea lanes and a stable rules-based order, these emerging pressures cannot be ignored. This report assesses how developments in deep-sea mining intersect 
with Australia’s defence interests across environmental, legal, and geostrategic dimensions. It contends that Australia must reinforce international law, monitor Pacific Island states’ interest in deep-sea mining, and be ready to respond if maritime 
Australia has an opportunity to be a regional leader in sustainable and legally compliant deep-sea mining, but it must first 
understand the dynamics and complex issues playing out in the Indo-Pacific and beyond.  

ARTIKEL4

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Published

12-01-2026

How to Cite

Securing The Seabed: Australia’s Strategic Choices In Deep-Sea Mining. (2026). Indonesian Maritime Journal, 5(2), 28. https://doi.org/10.52307/h3kma464

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