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Frank, Hon. Richard A., Administrator, National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, Department of Commerce...

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Dubs, Marne, on behalf of the American Mining Congress

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Ely, Northcutt, special counsel for Deepsea Ventures, Inc.

227, 229

Houseman, C. Thomas, Vice President, Technical Director for Mining, The
Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A

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Kaufman, Alan

L'Esperance, Robert L., director-corporate explorations & investigations, re-

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Ary, T S, manager, development in the Australasia division, San Francisco,
Calif., representing the Association of Professional Geological Scientists.... 450, 454

Barnes, James, counsel, international project, Center for Law and Social

Policy, Washington, D.C., representing the Environmental Defense Fund,

the Friends of the Earth, the National Audubon Society, the Natural

Resources Defense Council, and the Sierra Club.

390, 395

Charney, Jonathan I., associate professor of law, Vanderbilt University School
of Law, Nashville, Tenn....

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466

Johnston, James L., senior economist, Standard Oil Co. of Indiana
Kilmarx, Robert A., director of raw materials studies, Center for Strategic
and International Studies, Georgetown University, Washington, D.C......... 407, 410

Levering, Samuel R., director, U.S. Committee for the Oceans, Washington,

D.C.; also representing National Parks & Conservation Association,

Friends Quaker Committee on National Legislation, and the Law of the

Sea Project of the United Methodist Church..

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Lock, Reinier, chairman, Special Committee on Law of the Sea, Bar Association of San Francisco

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Logue, Dr. John J., director, World Order Research Institute, Villanova University, Villanova, Pa

421, 426 361

Matsunaga, Hon. Spark M., a U.S. Senator from the State of Hawaii
Pritchard, Hon. Joel, a U.S. Representative from the State of Washington ... 369, 372
Richardson, Hon. Elliot L., Ambassador at Large and Special Representative of
the President to the Law of the Sea Conference, accompanied by Myron
Nordquist, Office of the Law of the Sea, Department of State
Statham, Alfred P., vice president, INCO United States, Inc., New York, NY.

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442,

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Stevens, Hon. Ted, a U.S. Senator from the State of Alaska

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Tinsley, C. Richard, minerals economist, Mining Division, Continental Illinois
National Bank, Chicago, Ill....

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APPENDIX

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Additional statements submitted for the record.

MINING OF THE DEEP SEABED

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1977

U.S. SENATE,

SUBCOMMITTEE ON PUBLIC LANDS AND
RESOURCES, OF THE COMMITTEE ON ENERGY AND

NATURAL RESOURCES, AND THE COMMITTEE ON
COMMERCE, SCIENCE, AND TRANSPORTATION,
Washington, D.C.

The subcommittee and committee met, pursuant to notice, at 10:05 a.m., in room 3110, Dirksen Office Building, Hon. Lee Metcalf presiding.

Present: Senators Metcalf, Hatfield, Weicker, Hollings, and Melcher.

Also present: Steven P. Quarles, counsel; Norm Williams, professional staff member, Subcommittee on Public Lands and Resources; and James P. Walsh, general counsel; Deborah Stirling, and Christopher Koch, professional staff members; Gerald Kovach, minority staff counsel, Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation.

OPENING STATEMENT OF HON. LEE METCALF, A U.S. SENATOR FROM THE STATE OF MONTANA

Senator METCALF. The joint hearing will be in order.

This is the first of 3 days of joint hearings on S. 2053 before the Subcommittee on Public Lands and Resources of the Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, and the Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation. I want to extend a warm welcome to all my distinguished colleagues, with the hope that they will be able to participate fully in all of these hearings.

Our purpose is to take testimony on S. 2053, a bill to promote the orderly and environmentally sound exploration for and commercial recovery of hard mineral resources of the deep seabed, pending the adoption of an international regime controlling such activities.

S. 2053 is a bill which was introduced by me on August 5, 1977, in order to accomplish two basic goals. First: The bill would establish an interim regulatory system covering activities of U.S. citizens, including, in certain cases, foreign corporations, engaged in the mining of hard minerals from the deep seabed, outside of national jurisdiction and beyond the Continental Shelf.

Second: The bill would establish a voluntary insurance program to protect the investment of such U.S. citizens and corporations in deep seabed mining and processing equipment.

Let me say a word or two about the basic assumption underlying S. 2053. This bill specifically disclaims any assertion by the U.S.

(1)

Government of sovereignty over any area of the deep seabed. I don't believe there is any need for this Nation to take such a step, nor would it be justifiable.

Under existing international law, the commercial recovery of ferromanganese nodules-which is the type of hard mineral we are considering-from the deep seabed is entirely legal and proper. U.S. citizens who wish to mine nodules are quite within their rights.

Since nodules contain minerals such as copper, nickel, cobalt, and manganese which are essential to the health and stability of our industrial economy, and since these particular minerals are, in large measure, imported from other countries, constituting a significant drain on our balance of payments, S. 2053 declares it to be in the national interest for Congress to encourage our citizens and corporations to proceed with development of ocean mining in a manner which will not damage the marine environment nor intrude on the rights of other nations.

It is certainly not my intention, nor is it the purpose of this legislation, to dispute the United Nations resolution designating the resources of the deep seabed as the common heritage of mankind. I wish to make that understood at the outset.

The resolution of the United Nations was an historic declaration. Nevertheless, until the Law of the Sea Conference negotiations have been successfully concluded, and until there is, in effect, an international agreement which will, among other things, spell out the legal meaning of the term "common heritage of mankind," we must assume the customary freedom of the high seas will continue to guide American citizens in their use of the world's oceans. Therefore, S. 2053 is based upon the assumption that, pending the entry into force of an international agreement of this kind, U.S. citizens and corporations have a perfect right to mine the deep seabed. In the interest of orderly development and protection of the marine environment, Congress should institute an interim regime covering the activities of those citizens and corporations-a regime which will be superseded when the new international regime takes

over.

In the last few years, a number of ocean mining bills have come before the Congress. On these committees, we have yielded repeatedly to requests emanating from the State Department to withhold action on the legislation because of the allegedly traumatic effect such unilateral action as enacting an ocean-mining bill would have upon the Law of the Sea Conference.

We finally lost patience in the last Congress and passed S. 713 out of committee. However, that bill was not well received by the other committees to which it was referred, nor was there any intention to bring it to the floor for Senate consideration.

Perhaps the fears of the State Department were well founded. Perhaps the Department was right when it insisted that oceanmining legislation would seriously disturb, if not disrupt, the Law of the Sea Conference. It seemed like a reasonable concern at that time. But that time has passed.

What is now obvious to many observers is the bankruptcy of the Conference. It has dashed the hopes of those who have looked to it for production of a comprehensive new body of international law

dealing with all uses of the world's oceans. The interminable bickerings, and the backroom wheeling and dealing in Committee One threaten to bring the whole effort to naught.

When Ambassador Elliot Richardson testified before the Subcommittee on Public Lands and Resources on July 26, 1977, following the conclusion of the Sixth Session of the Law of the Sea Conference in New York, he all but urged Congress to get on with enacting deep seabed legislation. I believe he testified to that effect before other committees on both sides.

Ambassador Richardon's testimony reflected a sharp turn away from the previous State Department position. It reflected, too, the dismay with which Mr. Richardson viewed the way Committee One Chairman Paul Engo cavalierly altered and distorted the treaty text which had been painstakingly discussed, article by article, by the 150 delegates during the 6-week session.

Ambassador Richardson characterized the treaty text produced by Chairman Engo as completely unacceptable. His rejection of the Engo text has prompted a thorough reassessment of the U.S. position with respect to continued participation in the Law of the Sea Conference. I understand this review is still underway.

Clearly, it is time to examine deep seabed legislation carefully and seriously with a view to moving it to enactment in the 95th Congress. I trust we shall begin that process in the Senate today by considering S. 2053. Thus, we can benefit from the thinking of those who have worked most closely with the legislation on the House side in addition to those representing three Federal agencies which will be most directly involved in implementing this bill. For the record, I hereby order the inclusion at this point of bill S. 2053 and any reports from the administration. We have received the GAO report.

[The material referred to follows:]

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