Skip to content
Environment

MEDIA + TALENT ALERT: The 30th session of the International Seabed Authority Assembly starts

Greenpeace Australia Pacific 2 mins read

MEDIA + TALENT ALERT: The 30th session of the International Seabed Authority Assembly starts

TUESDAY 22 JULY — The future of deep sea mining will be a focus for world leaders this week as the International Seabed Authority (ISA) Assembly kicked in Kingston, Jamaica overnight (11pm AEST). Delegates, including those from the Pacific and Australia, will discuss deep sea mining for the first time since The Metals Company (TMC) submitted the first-ever application to commercially mine the international seabed.

During the Council meeting, which ended overnight, governments responded to the application by launching an investigation into whether mining contractors, including TMC’s subsidiaries Nauru Ocean Resources Inc. (NORI) and Tonga Offshore Mining Limited (TOML), are complying with contractual obligations to act in accordance with the international legal framework. The Council ended with a clear signal that this industry will not get international approval anytime soon. 

Rae Bainteiti, Pacific Political Coordinator at Greenpeace Australia Pacific, said from the ISA in Kingston: 


“Despite industry pressure reaching fever pitch, governments have sent a clear signal that the deep sea mining industry will not get international approval any time soon.

“As more delegations arrive to attend the ISA Assembly meeting, they’ll be met by a rising tide of voices — from scientists, Pacific communities, businesses, and concerned citizens — all saying the same thing: deep sea mining is a dangerous gamble we cannot afford. For generations, Indigenous knowledge has taught us that the ocean is not just a resource—it is a sacred, living system central to Pacific identity and survival. We have always known that disturbing the seabed threatens the balance of life in ways science is only beginning to understand. The only responsible way forward at the ISA is a global moratorium.”

— ENDS —

TALENT AVAILABLE

Greenpeace spokespeople and Pacific allies are available in Kingston and across the Pacific region on topics including:

  • The threats deep sea mining poses to Pacific people, heritage and culture

  • The dangers of a rushed mining code and the importance of decision-making being centred around Indigenous and Pacific voices

  • Deep sea mining across the Pacific, various viewpoints, history and local civil society momentum to stop deep sea mining

  • High-level analysis and reactions to announcements and developments

  • Calls for Australia and Pacific governments

 



IN KINGSTON (GMT-5):

Raeed Ali, Pacific Community Mobiliser at Greenpeace Australia Pacific

Location: Kingston, Jamaica

From: Fiji


Rae Bainteiti, Pacific Political Coordinator at
Greenpeace Australia Pacific

Location: Kingston, Jamaica

From: Kiribati


Alanna Matamaru Smith, Director of
Te Ipukarea Society

Location: Kingston, Jamaica

From: Rarotonga, Cook Islands

Millicent Barty, Founder of Kastom Keepers

Location: Kingston, Jamaica

From: Solomon Islands

Louisa Casson, campaigner at Greenpeace International

Location: Kingston, Jamaica

From: United Kingdom


IN THE PACIFIC REGION:

 

Glenn Walker, Head of Nature at Greenpeace Australia Pacific (GMT+10)

Location: Sydney, Australia

Juressa Lee, Campaigner at Greenpeace Aotearoa (GMT+12)

Location: Auckland, Aotearoa-New Zealand


Key Facts:

Images can be found here


About us:

Greenpeace Australia Pacific is a global independent campaigning organisation that uses peaceful protest and creative confrontation to expose environmental problems and promote solutions essential to a green and peaceful future.


Contact details:

Greenpeace Australia Pacific: Kimberley Bernard on [email protected] or +61 407 581 404
Greenpeace International: Sol Gosetti on [email protected] or +34664029407 (WhatsApp)

Media

More from this category

  • Environment, Government Federal
  • 13/02/2026
  • 11:29
The Climate Council

Another coal approval, more climate harm for Australians

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE 13TH FEBRUARY 2026 TheAlbanese Government’s approval of the expansion and extension of Queensland’s Middlemount Coal Mine will lock in millions of tonnes of additional climate pollution and intensify heatwaves, bushfires, floods and cyclones. This is the Albanese Government’s 35th fossil fuel approval. The approval will allowMiddlemount Coal Mine to continue extracting up to 5.7 million tonnes of coal every year until 2053. The extension is expected to emit an additional 283,000 tonnes of climate pollution each year on average, up to 6.1 million tonnes in total – equivalent to taking almost 80 million flights from Sydney to…

  • Environment
  • 12/02/2026
  • 08:00
Monash University

New research is shaping the future of urban experimentation

Cities everywhere are running experiments to respond to climate change and sustainability challenges such as new mobility trials, energy pilots, green space projects, circular economy approaches, and more. New research from the Monash Business School has found that many of these efforts stay small, stay siloed, or fade when funding ends. Published in Nature Cities, the Monash research studied almost 2000 urban experiments and identified 10 lessons that focus on three areas: how experiments are designed and learned from; how power and decision-making shape them; and how they create lasting change. Professor Rob Raven, from the Monash Business School, is…

  • Environment, Research Development
  • 11/02/2026
  • 11:04
Charles Darwin University

Nanoplastics hindering cognitive abilities of fish, international research shows

Nanoplastic exposure can impair the cognitive abilities of fish and could lead to significant impacts on marine species’ ability to survive, according to a…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.