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    Deep Sea Minerals exploration licence: CCZ project implications for mine planners

    March 24, 2026|

    Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

    Deep Sea Minerals exploration licence: CCZ project implications for mine planners

    First reported on MINING.com

    30 Second Briefing

    Deep Sea Minerals (CSE: SEAS), via its US subsidiary American Ocean Minerals Corp., has applied to NOAA for a DSHMRA exploration licence targeting polymetallic nodules in a defined tract of the Clarion-Clipperton Zone in the Pacific. The submission includes baseline environmental data, proposed monitoring and mitigation measures, and a phased exploration plan with specified expenditure commitments. NOAA has recently pledged extra resources to accelerate licence and permit reviews, following a 2025 US executive order promoting deep-sea mining for nickel, copper and manganese.

    Technical Brief

    • Application is lodged under the US Deep Seabed Hard Mineral Resources Act (DSHMRA) framework.
    • NOAA is the competent US regulator for mineral exploration and recovery in international waters.
    • Deep Sea Minerals is using its US subsidiary, American Ocean Minerals Corp., as the qualified applicant entity.
    • Target resource is polymetallic nodules, implying focus on unconsolidated seabed deposits rather than seafloor massive sulphides.
    • Submission explicitly covers technical, environmental and operational information packages required by NOAA regulations.
    • CEO James Deckelman emphasises a phased exploration approach with ongoing environmental data collection and evaluation.
    • Recent US executive order signals federal policy support for deep-sea mining of nickel, copper and manganese.

    Our Take

    Deep Sea Minerals’ move into the Clarion-Clipperton Zone comes as NOAA has already streamlined US deep-sea permitting into a single-step process, as noted in the 21 January 2026 regulatory overhaul piece, which likely shortens timelines from exploration to commercial recovery for copper, manganese and nickel projects.

    Our database shows multiple recent items where NOAA rulings were pivotal for TMC and other CCZ players, suggesting that US-based applicants like Deep Sea Minerals may now face more predictable, but also more tightly scrutinised, pathways than operators working solely through the International Seabed Authority.

    The presence of onshore gold and potash projects such as Goldstrike, Black Pine and Jansen in the same coverage set underlines that deep-sea critical minerals in the Pacific Ocean are increasingly being evaluated alongside conventional Utah/Idaho and Saskatchewan-style assets when companies weigh portfolio exposure to 2–3% annual nutrient demand growth and energy-transition metals demand.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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