New Zealand’s treasured seabed faces threat as mining battles intensify

A new law fast-tracking mining approvals in New Zealand threatens to reignite a long-standing battle between the community and a mining company over the protection of the Taranaki seabed.

Eva Corlett reports for The Guardian.


In short:

  • Trans-Tasman Resources has been trying to mine iron sands off the South Taranaki coast, facing fierce opposition from locals for over a decade.
  • A pro-mining government is pushing a law that could fast-track mining projects, bypassing lengthy environmental consent processes.
  • The local community, including environmental groups and Māori iwi, fears the mining could devastate marine life and local livelihoods.

Key quote:

“We’re pro-business … but this [area] is far too important to wreck – [mining] is going to wreck it for a lot of years.”

— Phil Morgan, former dairy farmer and avid fisher

Why this matters:

As the government weighs economic gain against environmental protection, the battle for New Zealand’s sea-floor riches is more than just a local issue—it’s a global one, with implications for how we value and protect our planet’s natural resources in the face of growing industrial pressures. Read more: Forty years of “just around the corner.”

About the author(s):

EHN Curators
EHN Curators
Articles curated and summarized by the Environmental Health News' curation team. Some AI-based tools helped produce this text, with human oversight, fact checking and editing.

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