The declaration highlights the need for G7 members and partners to reduce supply-chain vulnerabilities, mobilize public and private capital, support responsible production and processing, improve market transparency, and strengthen cooperation across critical minerals value chains.
Deep Sea Minerals believes the declaration reinforces the growing importance of evaluating new sources of critical minerals that can support allied supply-chain resilience, advanced manufacturing, defense, energy systems, digital infrastructure, and next-generation technologies.
“The G7 declaration sends a clear message: critical minerals supply security is now a strategic priority for allied economies,” said James Deckelman, Chief Executive Officer of Deep Sea Minerals Corp. “Deep Sea Minerals is aligned with the call for diversified, transparent and standards-based supply chains, and we believe developed offshore mineral opportunities can form part of a broader solution alongside land-based mining, recycling, processing capacity and strategic stockpiling.”
The Company continues to advance regulatory, technical and environmental workstreams associated with its offshore critical minerals strategy. Deep Sea Minerals recently announced that it submitted an exploration license application through the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration regulatory pathway under the Deep Seabed Hard Mineral Resources Act of 1980 and has received a substantial compliance determination in connection with that application, an important procedural milestone in the Company’s ongoing regulatory process. No exploration license has been awarded at this stage, and the application remains subject to the applicable regulatory review and approval process.
Deep Sea Minerals cautions that any future exploration or development activities remain subject to applicable international, national, environmental and regulatory frameworks, and that the Company has not made any production decision.