Close Menu
    Facebook LinkedIn
    Geo365
    Facebook LinkedIn
    BESTILL Login ABONNÉR PÅ NYHETSBREV
    • Hjem
    • Anlegg og infrastruktur
    • Aktuelt
    • Bergindustri
    • Dyphavsmineraler
    • Miljø
    • Olje og gass
    • Geofunn
    • Download Media Guide
    Geo365
    You are at:Home » Japan retrieves rare-earth-rich mud from 6,000 meters in deep-sea first
    Dyphavsmineraler

    Japan retrieves rare-earth-rich mud from 6,000 meters in deep-sea first

    A Japanese test mission has lifted REE-rich mud from the seabed off Minami-Torishima, showing that such deep-sea deposits can be accessed. The samples will now be analyzed, and further trials are needed before commercial extraction can be considered.
    By Ronny Setsåmars 11, 2026
    Del denne artikkelen Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email

    Japan has successfully retrieved sediment containing rare earth elements (REE) from the seabed off Minami-Torishima Island (Marcus Island) in the Pacific Ocean, some 1,900 kilometers southeast of Tokyo.

    At nearly 6,000 meters below the sea surface, the mission marked what the government describes as the world’s first test recovery of rare-earth-rich deep-sea muds at such depths.

    First identified by the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC) in 2013, this deposit could provide Japan with a stable, long-term supply of REEs critical to its high-tech, energy, and defense industries.

    According to The Japan Times, the sediment samples will undergo detailed laboratory analysis, including to determine the content of REEs. Kei Sato, a government spokesperson, called the retrieval «a meaningful achievement both in terms of economic security and comprehensive maritime development.»

    Japan’s industry is heavily dependent on imported REEs, with the majority supplied by China. This dependency has long been recognized as a vulnerability. Japan remembers well the 2010 incident when China restricted rare earth exports amid a diplomatic dispute, causing a spike in global prices and raising concerns about supply chain security. Securing domestic sources is therefore a key motivation for exploring deep-sea deposits.

    The deposit

    The Minami-Torishima deposit lies entirely within Japan’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ), which simplifies legal and regulatory issues compared with international waters. Early estimates suggest that the deposit may contain 16 million tonnes of REE oxides. The most promising area (102 km2) and the uppermost ten meters of the mud could yield 1.2 million tonnes of REE oxide, potentially meeting global demand for yttrium, europium, terbium, and dysprosium for decades.

    A 2018 Nature Scientific Reports article reported core samples with REE and yttrium grades of up to 5,000 ppm (0.5 %), comparable to many global, terrestrial deposits. Separation and selective processing could enhance the resource’s economic value by increasing the grade in the lifted mud.

    The mud itself represents a unique geological formation. A 1990 research article noted that REE-rich muds in the Pacific, like those near Minami-Torishima, contain fish-bone debris composed of biogenic calcium phosphate, which accumulates REEs from seawater. Low sedimentation rates and high biological productivity have contributed to the formation of thick, REE-enriched layers, establishing this as a distinct fourth type of deep-sea mineral resource, alongside nodules, massive sulfides, and polymetallic crusts.

    Seabed Minerals 2026

    24-26 March 2026

    Bergen, Norway

    PROGRAM AND REGISTRATION

    A challenging undertaking

    Unlike solid nodules, sulfides, and crusts, REE-rich muds targeted in this project have the consistency of clay and cannot simply be scraped or dredged like harder ores.

    According to a Nature sponsored feature, Japanese engineers have been working on developing a “subsea factory” system: machinery placed on the seafloor mixes the mud with seawater, mills it into fine particles, and pumps it as a slurry through reinforced riser pipes to the surface.

    Developers from JAMSTEC, Toyo Engineering, and TOA Corporation have spent several years addressing multiple hurdles.

    Building pipes capable of reaching nearly 6,000 m while withstanding immense pressure, abrasion, and constant stress is a significant engineering challenge, as industrial risers are mostly designed for shallower operations.

    On the seabed, machinery must function reliably in near‑total darkness and extreme pressure to agitate and feed the mud into the riser. Early development work has also highlighted that underlying sediment layers are weaker than expected, which could complicate operations.

    Even if extraction technology proves feasible, refining rare earths from the complex mixture recovered remains a separate challenge, as advanced separation and processing capacity is concentrated in very few countries, and Japan’s own refining infrastructure may need to be adapted and expanded to handle any future output.

    If the lab analysis yields positive results, the project partners have previously stated that they aim to initiate trial operations in January 2027, using a system capable of extracting 350 tons of mud per day.

    For now, the January 2026 mission represents a significant proof-of-concept, demonstrating that rare-earth-rich mud can be accessed and recovered from extreme ocean depths. The results place Japan at the forefront of developing deep-sea mining concepts and technologies, although whether extraction and processing will be commercial remains to be seen.

    Related Posts

    European ambivalence on seabed mining

    mars 1, 2026

    Technology is always missing in the debate about seabed mineral extraction

    februar 23, 2026

    A pragmatic approach to seabed mining

    februar 4, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    NYHETSBREV
    Abonner på vårt nyhetsbrev
    geo365.no: ledende leverandør av nyheter og kunnskap som vedrører geofaget og geofaglige problemstillinger relatert til norsk samfunnsliv og næringsliv.
    KONFERANSER

    The dark oxygen controversy
    Mar 10, 2026

    The dark oxygen controversy

    Et gigantisk karbonlager 
    Mar 05, 2026

    Et gigantisk karbonlager 

    Et kosmisk sammenstøt i Polhavet
    Mar 03, 2026

    Et kosmisk sammenstøt i Polhavet

    Asteroidenedslag kan endre livet på jorda 
    Feb 26, 2026

    Asteroidenedslag kan endre livet på jorda 

    Meteorer: Bardufoss
    Feb 24, 2026

    Meteorer: Bardufoss

    Recognising structural inversion
    Mar 11, 2026

    Recognising structural inversion

    Moroccan Atlantic Margin: Where geological diversity meets outstanding exploration potential
    Mar 10, 2026

    Moroccan Atlantic Margin: Where geological diversity meets outstanding exploration potential

    What words mean
    Mar 09, 2026

    What words mean

    A blowout in Mexico
    Mar 08, 2026

    A blowout in Mexico

    Venezuela, Greenland, Iran and oil
    Mar 06, 2026

    Venezuela, Greenland, Iran and oil

    OLJEPRIS
    BCOUSD quotes by TradingView
    GULLPRIS
    GOLD quotes by TradingView
    KOBBERPRIS
    Track all markets on TradingView
    GeoPublishing AS

    GeoPublishing AS
    Trollkleiva 23
    N-1389 Heggedal

    Publisher & General Manager

    Ingvild Ryggen Carstens
    ingvild@geopublishing.no
    cell: +47 974 69 090

    Editor in Chief

    Ronny Setså
    ronny@geopublishing.no
    +47 901 08 659

    Media Guide

    Download Media Guide

    ABONNEMENT
    NYHETSBREV
    Abonner på vårt nyhetsbrev
    © 2026 GeoPublishing AS - All rights reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.