Search A Light In The Darkness

Monday, 4 May 2026

Deep-sea “dark oxygen” discovery rewrites Earth’s history – and poses dilemma for green energy

 Researchers found that polymetallic nodules on the Pacific seafloor produce oxygen through electrolysis – without sunlight or photosynthesis – challenging the long-held belief that oxygen originates solely from biological processes.

These nodules, rich in metals like cobalt and lithium (used in "green energy" tech), are targeted for industrial-scale mining, risking irreversible damage to deep-sea ecosystems that rely on their oxygen-producing function.

Globalist-backed corporations exploit "climate change" narratives to justify destructive deep-sea mining, despite evidence that disrupting these nodules could collapse marine oxygen cycles and food chains.

Mining operations could smother deep-sea life with toxic sediment plumes, while governments and corporations ignore warnings from scientists and nations calling for moratoriums.

The discovery exposes humanity's arrogance in dismantling ecosystems (like deep oceans) for short-term profit, revealing how little we truly know about Earth’s self-regulating processes.

For centuries, science has taught that oxygen – the lifeblood of Earth's atmosphere – comes exclusively from photosynthesis, the process by which plants, algae and cyanobacteria convert sunlight into energy. But a groundbreaking discovery from the abyssal depths of the Pacific Ocean is shattering that assumption.

Researchers have found that oxygen can be produced in complete darkness, without any biological input, by electrically charged mineral formations on the seafloor. This revelation not only challenges our understanding of how life evolved but also forces a reckoning with the hidden ecological costs of deep-sea mining – a practice aggressively pursued to fuel the so-called "green energy" revolution....<<<Read More>>>...