International Ocean Law
description
Transcript of International Ocean Law
International Ocean Law
JurisdictionMarine Pollution
International Fishing
Why the Oceans Matter
• 70% of the earth is covered in seas– Food source– Pollution assimilation – especially CO2– Shipping and transportation
• We know very little about the oceans
Jurisdiction
• Background principle– Freedom of the seas• Historically = free passage/ free fishing• “tragedy of the commons”
– Customary limitation: territorial seas• 3 miles from coast• “cannon shot rule”
Jurisdiction
• Continental shelf– After World War II– United States asserted jurisdiction over natural
resources and seabed of contiguous continental shelf
– Other countries followed• Creeping jurisdiction + increasing disputes
– UN Conference on the Law of the Sea 1958
Jurisdiction
• UNCLOS– United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea– 1982 signed– 1994 entered into force– (but many elements were already customary law
by then!)
Jurisdiction
• UNCLOS – Jurisdiction– Ports– Territorial Seas– Contiguous Seas– Exclusive Economic Zones– High seas
Jurisdiction
Jurisdiction
• UNCLOS – Jurisdiction– Ports = internal waters• Full national authority (with limited exceptions)
Jurisdiction
• UNCLOS – Jurisdiction– Territorial Seas = baseline to 12 nautical miles• Baseline = coast/harbor walls
– Subject to dispute• Coastal state authority
– = almost complete authority– Subject to right of innocent passage
Jurisdiction
• UNCLOS – Jurisdiction– Contiguous Seas = 12 to 24 nautical miles• “Limited” coastal authority• Except
– Customs– Fiscal– Immigration– Sanitary legislation and regulations
Jurisdiction
• UNCLOS – Jurisdiction– Exclusive Economic Zones = 12-200• Cover 30% of seas, 90% of commercial fisheries, and
almost all minerals• Coastal states have sovereign right to explore, exploit,
conserve and manage natural resources– May pass laws exercising these rights– May board, inspect and arrest crews on ships violating the
laws
Jurisdiction
• UNCLOS – Jurisdiction– Exclusive Economic Zones = 12-200• Coastal states shall ensure the conservation and
utilization of their living marine resources• States shall take measures to prevent and reduce
pollution• States shall avoid activities under their jurisdiction that
cause damage to other States and their environments
Jurisdiction
• UNCLOS – Jurisdiction– Exclusive Economic Zones = 12-200• But, in preventing pollution in their own jurisdiction,
States shall avoid interfering with activities carried out by other States in their exercise of their rights
Jurisdiction
Jurisdiction
• UNCLOS – Jurisdiction– Territorial v. EEZ jurisdiction – tension• Coastal state has regulatory jurisdiction over all sources
of pollution in its territorial waters• In EEZ, pollution regulations must comport with
generally accepted international standards – typically based on technical standards set by the International Maritime Organization (IMO)• Ship could be in compliance with IMO standards in EEZ,
but violate State standards once in territorial waters
Jurisdiction
• UNCLOS – Jurisdiction– High seas – beyond 200 nautical miles• No national jurisdiction
Jurisdiction
• Innocent passage– All jurisdictional zones are subject to “innocent
passage”= transit passage of vessels on the sea
Jurisdiction
• Innocent passage– Qualifications• Innocent passage does not protect
– Any act of wilful and serious pollution in contravention of international law or
– Any fishing activities• Coastal state may adopt laws limiting right in regard to
conservation of living marine resources, preservation of environment, and control/reduction of pollution– But not based on design, construction, crew or equipment,
unless based on international standards
Jurisdiction
• Coastal states v. flag states– Coastal states = countries with actual coastal territory• Have jurisdiction over ships when ships are in their
territorial seas– Flag states = countries that license vessels to operate• Have jurisdiction over ships that fly their flags• Does not matter who owns the ship or what the nationality
of the crew is – only relevant thing is the flag• May create problems if dealing with “flags of convenience”
Oil Pollution
Oil pollution
• Oil pollution = most pervasive problem– 3,200 tankers per day– Huge: largest supertanker = 600,000 tons of oil• Line of fuel trucks 320 kilometers long
Oil Pollution: The Notorious Spills
Amoco Cadiz
Oil Pollution: Operational Discharges
If oil and ballast tanks are the same, emptying tanks will discharge oil – 0.4% of total cargo = 400 tons per voyage
Oil Pollution: Operational Discharges
Oil pollution impacts
• Impacts vary depending on type of oil– Different chemical compounds– Natural seeps are different from refined oils• Bacteria eat oil from natural seeps
– Location, species, depth, etc., all matter
Oil Pollution Early Treaties
• International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution of Sea by Oil (OILPOL)– First – no discharges within 50 miles of coast– Then – no discharges unless• Proceeding en route• Discharge = less than 1/15,000 of capacity• Rate = less than 60 liters per mile• Distance = more than 50 miles from land
– Neither worked
Oil Pollution Treaty: MARPOL 73/78
• Covers operational discharges, spills, and unintentional releases
MARPOL 73/78
• General requirements– States will establish international rules and
standards– “flag states” shall adopt laws for the prevention
and reduction of pollution from vessels flying their flags
– Coastal states may adopt regulations to prevent pollution• May apply them to vessels during innocent passage, so
long as they don’t hinder innocent passage
Oil pollution
• MARPOL – 3 elements– Mandatory discharge standards– Construction, design, equipment, and manning
specifications (CDEM)– Navigation standards
MARPOL 73/78
• MARPOL – 3 elements– Mandatory discharge standards• = limits on discharges• Operating procedures for washing tanks and ballast
water• Port States must provide reception facilities
MARPOL 73/78
• MARPOL – 3 elements– Construction, design, equipment, and manning
specifications (CDEM)• New ships must have segregated ballast tanks• Other requirements for filters• New ships need double hulls
Design Standards: Example
MARPOL 73/78
• MARPOL – 3 elements– Navigation standards in special areas• Special areas – oceanographical/ecological condition
– Need special protection and standards– Examples: Mediterranean Sea, Baltic Sea, Black Sea, Red Sea,
Gulf– No discharge allowed
Does MARPOL 73/78 work?
MARPOL 73/73
• MARPOL – Compliance– Specific tanker standards– Reporting and documentation requirements
MARPOL 73/78
• MARPOL – Compliance– Specific tanker standards• Tankers > 150 tons• Ships > 400 tons• Must get International Oil Pollution Prevention (IOPP)
Certificate – shows that ship meets technical standards• Surveys at least every 5 years + intermediate inspection• IOPPs issued by international classification societies
– Not States– Is this good or bad?
MARPOL 73/78
• MARPOL – Compliance– Specific tanker standards• If ship doesn’t meet applicable standards and ship
owner/operator does not take corrective action, IOPP withdrawn and Port state notified
MARPOL 73/78
• MARPOL – Compliance– Reporting and documentation requirements• Oil Record Book
– Records every ballasting/discharge– Loading of oil– Transfer of oil– Etc.
MARPOL 73/78
• MARPOL – Compliance– Certification societies• Private companies• Often have different standards• What risks?
– Pseudo-IOPPs
MARPOL 73/78
• MARPOL – Compliance– Oil book and self-reporting• What risks?• What opportunities?
MARPOL 73/78
• MARPOL – Compliance– Oil book and self-reporting• What risks?
– Would you report every time you drove over the speed limit?• What opportunities?
– Passengers – garbage discharges– Crew – “magic pipes”
MARPOL 73/78 – “Magic Pipe”
Oil Pollution: Sources of Spills
Oil pollution enforcement: flag states v. coastal states
• Flag states– Vessel is part of a flag state’s territory or
nationality– Flag states can enforce against flagged vessel’s
violations• Except coastal state authority is more powerful in
territorial seas
Oil pollution enforcement: flag states v. coastal states
• Coastal states– May use territorial authority to enforce against
flagged vessels in their territorial seas, so long as they don’t infringe on innocent passage
Oil pollution enforcement: flag states v. coastal states
• Port states– Jurisdiction based on presence of vessel in port
• Port v. Coastal:– Coastal state jurisdiction – if pollution occurs in
coastal waters, state acts as coastal state– If the only connection is based on ship’s presence,
then state acts as port state
Oil pollution enforcement: MARPOL
• IOPP certificates– Port state may inspect to verify a valid IOPP exists– Port state may detain ship until ship can proceed
to sea without presenting unreasonable threat of harm to marine environment if• clear grounds for believing ship doesn’t conform to
IOPP or that IOPP is not valid, • Clear grounds for believing master or crew is not
familiar with procedures– If ship doesn’t have IOPP, ok to inspect
Oil pollution enforcement: MARPOL
• Coastal states may detain and institute legal proceedings if ships violate rules and cause “major damage or threat of major damage”– If violation happens in territorial waters, coastal
state may enforce– Otherwise, coastal state must pass along findings
to flag State for enforcement• Except: history of non-enforcement
Oil pollution enforcement: MARPOL
• Flag states– If violation alleged, flag state may• Find vessel not guilty• No action b/c insufficient evidence• No action for “other and unspecified reason”• Give a warning• Levy a fine• Take other unspecified actions
Oil pollution enforcement: MARPOL
• Flag states– Enforcement by Flag state preempts coastal or
port State, except:• If discharge caused major damage to coastal State• If flag State has a history of non-enforcement
Oil pollution enforcement: MARPOL
• Flags of Convenience– Ship owners often register vessels in countries
known for weak enforcement– 30% of world’s shipping carried by ships operating
under Liberia or Panama flags• Can employ foreign crews for cheap wages• Corporate laws allow anonymity = prosecution is
difficult
Oil pollution enforcement: MARPOL
• Flags of convenience – remedies?– Port state inspections + detention until repairs
made– Port states may enforce violations outside of the
EEZs – i.e., on the high seas• Coastal states may enforce for violations within EEZs
Oil pollution enforcement: MARPOL
• Flags of convenience – remedies?– Limits on detention• May detain ship to inspect and enforce• But may not “unduly detain”