The Japanese part of the IODP program is called , Japanese for "Earth Discovery".
Chikyū is operated by the Centre for Deep Earth Research (CDEX), a subdivision of the
Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC). JAMSTEC also operates the
DSV Shinkai,
Earth Simulator supercomputer and other marine scientific research projects. CDEX is responsible for the services to support activities including on-board staffing, data management for core samples and logging; implements engineering site surveys; and conducts engineering developments. CDEX contracts with the Mantle Quest Japan Company for the navigation of the ship. The
Chikyū Hakken program is part of an international scientific collaborative effort with scientists from the
United States,
ECORD, a consortium consisting of several European countries and Canada,
China,
South Korea, Australia and New Zealand (ANZIC), and
India. In January 2026,
Chikyū was deployed near
Minamitorishima island in Japan's Pacific
exclusive economic zone to conduct the first trial extraction of
rare earth-rich mud from approximately 6,000 metres below the sea surface, according to the
Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC). The three-week mission concluded on 14 February 2026 and targeted approximately 35 tonnes of seabed mud, each tonne estimated to contain around two kilograms of rare earth elements. The mission was part of Japan's Strategic Innovation Promotion Program and aimed at reducing Japan's reliance on Chinese rare earth imports, according to
The Japan Times. ==Design==