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A new publication in the prestigious journal Global Change Biology
CIMA researcher Nélia Mestre is co-author of a study that proposes a framework that could be applied to compare the environmental impacts of deep-seabed with those from land-based mining. This framework (Environmental Impact Wheel) includes a suite of physicochemical and biological components, rather than a few selected metrics, surrogates, or proxies.
This study resulted from collaborative work with researchers from all over the world: Canada, Australia, the USA, Germany, Trinidad and Tobago, the UK, Norway, Brazil, India, Belgium, and Ireland.
It is available for open access through the link: Metaxas et al. 2024. Comparing environmental impacts of deep-seabed and land-based mining: A defensible framework. Global Change Biology