A little-known group meeting in Jamaica is causing big waves this month as it considers new rules that could open the sea floor to industrial-scale mining for precious metals used in electric car batteries and other green technology.

The possibility of a Gold Rush at the bottom of the sea is keeping some oceanographers up at night.

“We don’t know what’s down there. We don’t know the ecosystems. We don’t know the damage that could be done,” said Douglas McCauley, a professor of ocean science at the University of California, Santa Barbara.

No sunlight ever reaches the abyssal zone that would be mined and temperatures never rise above 39 degrees. Even at those depths, the ocean floor teems with life. It’s slow-growing and often small but it is there – and some of it glows.

“Life down there operates like it’s on a different planet,” said McCauley. Because the environment is so cold and dark “the clock of life ticks more slowly.” Some of the organisms that have been documented are among the oldest on the planet, including corals that are more than 4,000 years old.

Some environmental groups say ocean floor mining could have catastrophic consequences for a vast number of critical ecosystems we know very little about – including marine food chains that feed hundreds of millions of people.

But it’s been known for decades that the sea floor also holds important mineral resources. Mining companies say without the critical metals and minerals, transitioning to green energy will be impossible and doom efforts to stop climate change.

Here’s what to know about deep sea mining — and why you might be hearing more about it soon.

What is deep sea mining?

The mining involves sending robotic submarines as much as four miles below the ocean’s surface, twice as deep as the crushing depths that destroyed the Titan submersible in June, killing everyone onboard.

Robots would prospect the area to determine where to mine. That reconnaissance would be aimed at doing as little damage as possible, said Jamal Rostami, a professor of mining engineering at the Colorado School of Mines.