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Law of the Sea: Navigating Boundaries Idaho State Bar Int. Law Section

Law of the Sea: Navigating Boundaries Idaho State Bar Int. Law Section. Anastasia Telesetsky . Planet Ocean. Before there was the Law of the Sea (1604-1605). Hugo Grotius- Mare Liberum

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Law of the Sea: Navigating Boundaries Idaho State Bar Int. Law Section

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  1. Law of the Sea: Navigating BoundariesIdaho State Bar Int. Law Section

    Anastasia Telesetsky
  2. Planet Ocean
  3. Before there was the Law of the Sea (1604-1605) Hugo Grotius- Mare Liberum “My intention is to demonstrate briefly and clearly that the Dutch…have the right to sail to the East Indies…I shall base my argument on the unimpeachable axiom of the Law of Nations…Every nation is free to travel to every other nation and to trade with it.
  4. Beneficiaries of the Ocean trade Global shipping 2nd Largest Exporter of Containerized Cargo 7,529,000 containers per year to Asia 1st Largest Importer of Containerized Cargo Container ships alone do about $4 trillion dollars worth of trade
  5. Freedom of the Seas Based on the adoption of Grotius’ ideas- Restrained sovereignty The Louis (2 Dodson 210) (1817) Sir William Scott “All nations being equal, all have an equal rightto the uninterrupted use of the unappropriated parts of the ocean for their navigation. In places where no local authority exists, where the subjects of all states meet upon a footing of entire equality and independence, no one state, or any of its subjects, has a right to assume or exercise authority over the subjects of another.”
  6. Creeping Jurisdiction Spanish and Portuguese created a six mile custom limit Imperial Russia claimed a 12 mile zone for customs and fisheries 1945 US claimed sovereign rights and jurisdiction over the “continental shelf” (Truman Proclamation) 1952- Chile claimed 200 nm “patrimonial sea”
  7. Before there was the Law of the Sea (1958) RATIFIED BY UNITED STATES IN 1961 Convention on the Territorial Sea and Contiguous Sea Convention on the High Seas Convention on the Continental Shelf Convention on Fishing and Conservation of Living Resources of the High Sea
  8. Continental Shelf claims Arctic Shelf
  9. Third United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea (1974-1982) Preamble- UNCLOS is a cooperative effort to create “a legal order for the seas and oceans which will facilitate international communication, and will promote the peaceful uses of the seas and oceans, the equitable and efficient utilisation of their resources, the conservation of their living resources, and the study, protection and preservation of the marine environment.”
  10. Constitution of the Oceans
  11. Basepoints and baselines Baselines- boundary line that determines where a State’s maritime sovereignty and jurisdiction begins and ends Exception: Straight Baseline Special rules under LOS for drawing baselines around archipelagoes. Islands vs. Rocks
  12. Rights of Innocent Passage in Territorial Sea States have the rights to continuous and expeditious passage through territorial waters Aircraft must request overflight permission Submarines also have right but must travel on the surface
  13. Exclusive Economic Zones- Mare Clausum Shall not extend beyond 200 nautical miles from the baseline from which the breadth of the territorial sea is measured.
  14. EEZ Sovereign rights to 1) Exploit 2) Conserve 3) Manage both living and non-living resources Coastal states have rights to create conservation measures but it is unclear whether they have right to prohibit transport of hazardous cargo
  15. “Provocative Move that Raises Tensions”
  16. High Seas Freedom of fishing States are expected to require its flagged vessels to comply with conservation measures Site of potential sea-bed mining International Seabed Authority
  17. SeabedMining
  18. Status of Law of the Sea Convention
  19. Why hasn’t the US ratified? Seabed Mining in the Area for the “benefit of mankind as a whole” Considered by some a “socialist redistribution of resources” Rhetoric: Acceding to the treaty “would expose the U.S. to lawsuits on virtually any maritime activity, such as alleged pollution of the marine environment from a land-based source or even through the atmosphere”
  20. Why should the US ratify? 1) Arctic interests 2) Concerns over stability in South China Sea and East China Sea 3) Safety of our navy Vulnerability to surveillance and interdiction- US ships can theoretically be restricted to designated sea lanes 4) Ocean governance- 71% of the oceans remain high seas-
  21. Ocean Governance- Who is captaining the ship?
  22. Future of Planet Ocean
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