China tests deep-sea cable cutter at 3,500 meters

A Chinese research ship has successfully tested a new electro-hydrostatic actuator capable of slicing undersea cables at depths up to 3,500 meters. The trial, conducted aboard the Haiyang Dizhi 2, bridges the gap from development to practical application, according to official reports. The demonstration coincides with heightened concerns over sabotage of global submarine cables.

The Haiyang Dizhi 2, equipped with a 150-ton crane and a 10-kilometer fiber optic winch, carried out the sea trial during a deep-sea science expedition. China Science Daily, published by the Chinese Academy of Sciences, reported that the test reached 11,483 feet (3,500 meters) and addressed the 'last mile' in deep-sea equipment deployment. The device, designed by researchers at the China Ship Scientific Research Center and the State Key Laboratory of Deep-sea Manned Vehicles, uses a diamond-coated grinding wheel powered by a compact electro-hydrostatic actuator to cut through armored cables. Its maximum depth capability is 13,123 feet (4,000 meters), and it fits on remotely operated vehicles, as detailed in South China Morning Post reporting from a 2025 journal publication in Mechanical Engineer. The technology is described for civilian 'marine resource development,' though previous patents have come from People's Liberation Army organizations and universities like Lishui University. Analyst Wendy Chang of the Mercator Institute for China Studies called it a 'show of strength,' noting China's mixed signals on subsea infrastructure amid denials of involvement in incidents like anchor damage by its ships. Chinese-flagged vessels have damaged cables and pipelines in the Baltic Sea in October 2023 and November 2024, which officials called accidents. Similar capabilities exist with the US and Russia, including Cold War-era submarine operations. Concerns persist over vulnerabilities in the 1.5 million kilometers of global submarine cables, especially near Taiwan and Guam.

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Cheong Wa Dae welcomes China's removal of disputed steel tower in Yellow Sea, symbolizing diplomatic progress.
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Cheong Wa Dae welcomes China's steel tower removal in Yellow Sea

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Cheong Wa Dae on Wednesday welcomed China's decision to remove one of three disputed steel structures from the overlapping waters in the Yellow Sea, calling it "meaningful progress." China's foreign ministry announced on Tuesday that work was underway to relocate one of the structures in the zone where the two countries' exclusive economic zones overlap. The South Korean government pledged to continue defending its maritime rights and fostering a peaceful region.

China’s navy lacks the advanced underwater equipment and operational readiness needed for salvage operations in carrier-based aircraft crashes, a military magazine tied to the country’s largest state-owned shipbuilder has warned. This risks exposing sensitive technology, especially as ongoing construction of advanced carriers extends the PLA Navy’s operational range far beyond China’s coastal waters.

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Japan has begun a five-week experiment to extract rare earth minerals from the deep seabed off Minamitorishima Island, aiming to reduce reliance on China for critical materials. The project, aboard the research vessel Chikyu, marks the first prolonged collection effort at such depths and highlights tensions between energy security and environmental risks. Officials hope it will support Japan's carbon neutrality goals by 2050 while bolstering industrial competitiveness.

Five Chinese navy ships transited the Tsushima Strait and headed northeast into the Sea of Japan, coinciding with Japan's Ground Self-Defence Force deploying new Type 25 long-range surface-to-ship guided missiles and hypervelocity gliding projectiles. Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning condemned the deployments as 'neo-militarism' and expressed serious concern.

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A Japanese research vessel returned to a port in central Japan on Saturday after collecting mud containing rare earth elements from the seabed. The mission assessed the feasibility of extracting critical minerals as part of a government project. Analysis of the samples will inform plans for a full-scale mining test in February 2027.

China's Ministry of Natural Resources has published an atlas from two decades of marine geological surveys, mapping the location, concentration, and distribution of dozens of elements in seabed sediments, including rare earths, iron, manganese, and copper. State broadcaster CCTV reported the atlas as a 'master navigation map' for marine development and conservation, based on over 20,000 observation points. Researcher Dou Yanguang from the Qingdao Institute of Marine Geology said it enables precise targeting of resources and identification of sensitive ecological zones.

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Japan has identified an enormous underwater rare earth deposit 6,000 meters deep near Minamitorishima, the remote Pacific atoll central to its accelerated deep-sea mining plans. Detailed in a recent WIRED report, the find—building on equipment installation earlier this year—bolsters Tokyo's drive for independence from Chinese supplies of these critical manufacturing materials.

 

 

 

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