Ex-Rio Tinto CEO’s deep-sea mining firm to merge with Odyssey in $1 billion deal

Industry:    2 days ago

A deep-sea mining firm led by former Rio Tinto CEO Tom Albanese will merge ​with Odyssey Marine Exploration in a $1 billion all-stock deal aimed at building one of the world’s largest portfolios ‌of underwater mineral deposits.

The move, announced on Wednesday, is just the latest in a slew of deals tied to the nascent deep-sea mining industry, which aims to extract critical minerals from the 70% of the planet covered by water even as the practice has sparked outcry from environmentalists and ​some countries.

No deep-sea mining has taken place yet due to diplomatic, regulatory and other challenges, although Washington and ​other Western governments are aggressively searching for new and alternative minerals supplies in a bid to counter ⁠Beijing’s market dominance.

American Ocean Minerals, which was formed earlier this year, aims to extract and then refine so-called polymetallic nodules ​which are strewn across huge swaths of the Pacific seabed and composed of cobalt, nickel, copper and manganese.

AOM will absorb ​Odyssey’s assets – which include an investment in privately held Ocean Minerals and its Cook Islands exploration license – along with those of CIC Limited, which Albanese chairs and also holds a Cook Islands exploration license.

Roughly 30% of Odyssey’s existing shareholders have already voted support for the deal.

AOM, which ​said its license areas may also contain rare earths and titanium, plans to hire a third party to refine the ​metals, although it may build a U.S. refinery in the future.

“What we’re seeing now is a concerted, bipartisan need to find energy and ‌minerals resources, ⁠and deep-sea mining is a key part of that,” Albanese, who is AOM’s chairman and who led Rio from 2007 through 2013, told Reuters.

As part of the deal, institutional investors will contribute $150 million in a private placement and $75 million in pre-public financing. Mike Rowe, the Emmy award-winning host of the reality television show “Dirty Jobs,” is a major investor.

Following the deal’s close, expected by August, ​the company will trade on ​the Nasdaq under the ⁠ticker “AOMC.”

Shares of Odyssey Marine rose 88% to $1.57 in Wednesday trading.

INTERNATIONAL FRICTION

AOM said it has asked the U.S. government for two international licenses in the Pacific’s Clarion-Clipperton Zone, a step that puts it at odds ​with the International Seabed Authority.

U.S. President Donald Trump in January said he would speed up permitting ​for companies aiming ⁠to mine internationally.

The ISA — created by the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, which the U.S. has not ratified — has for years been considering mining standards, but again failed to formalize them when it met last month.

Citigroup and Cantor Fitzgerald, the financial services firm chaired by Brandon Lutnick, ​son of U.S. Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick, arranged the private placement. Investment bank Moelis & Co advised Odyssey.

AOM plans to hold a Monday conference call ​to discuss the deal.

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