ShahidT
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Natural Resource Frontiers at Sea
By Schuyler Null // Wednesday, June 9, 2010
As burgeoning populations and growing economies continue to strain natural resource stocks around the world, countries have begun looking to more remote and difficult-to-access resources, including deep-sea oil, gas, and minerals. The UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) guarantees exclusive access to these resources within 200 nautical miles of a nation’s sovereign territory – called an exclusive economic zone (EEZ). TD Architects’ “Exclusive Economic Zone” map illustrates this invisible global chessboard and highlights some examples of disputed areas, such as the South China Sea, the Mediterranean, the Falkland/Malvina Islands, and the Arctic.
The creator of “Exclusive Economic Zone,” Theo Deutinger, points out “that if a country owns a minuscule rock somewhere in the ocean, this rock’s exploitable surface increases from almost zero on-shore to 430,000 km² offshore.”
The Law of the Sea – which the U.S. has not yet ratified – also adds the possibility of expanding certain EEZs over a country’s continental shelf (shown as hash marks in the map) after individual consideration by the UN Continental Shelf Commission.
At the poles, the claims of several countries on Antarctica were frozen under the 1959 Antarctica Treaty, but much of the Arctic Ocean remains beyond the 200 nautical mile purview of UNCLOS EEZs, and Russia, Norway, Iceland, Denmark, Canada, and the U.S. all have expressed interest in exploring and establishing claims in the far north.
The Gulf oil disaster has demonstrated some of the risks of deep-sea resource exploration. But increasing resource demand means that drilling and exploration will certainly continue, which only enhances the importance of establishing EEZs in disputed areas.
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Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) Rankings by area
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It's interesting how some states have an EEZ multiple times their land size because each tiny island/atoll adds an extra 200 nautical miles of EEZ for that state. So a country like Fed. States of Micronesia has an EEZ that is 4,000 times larger than their land area (of 702 km²)
A more normal example would be Greece having EEZ four times greater than its land area, partly because it controls most of the Aegean sea islands. Makes sense why there are such strongly contested and overlapping claims there between Turkey and Greece. Or in Spratly/Paracels between Asian states.
By Schuyler Null // Wednesday, June 9, 2010
As burgeoning populations and growing economies continue to strain natural resource stocks around the world, countries have begun looking to more remote and difficult-to-access resources, including deep-sea oil, gas, and minerals. The UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) guarantees exclusive access to these resources within 200 nautical miles of a nation’s sovereign territory – called an exclusive economic zone (EEZ). TD Architects’ “Exclusive Economic Zone” map illustrates this invisible global chessboard and highlights some examples of disputed areas, such as the South China Sea, the Mediterranean, the Falkland/Malvina Islands, and the Arctic.
The creator of “Exclusive Economic Zone,” Theo Deutinger, points out “that if a country owns a minuscule rock somewhere in the ocean, this rock’s exploitable surface increases from almost zero on-shore to 430,000 km² offshore.”
The Law of the Sea – which the U.S. has not yet ratified – also adds the possibility of expanding certain EEZs over a country’s continental shelf (shown as hash marks in the map) after individual consideration by the UN Continental Shelf Commission.
At the poles, the claims of several countries on Antarctica were frozen under the 1959 Antarctica Treaty, but much of the Arctic Ocean remains beyond the 200 nautical mile purview of UNCLOS EEZs, and Russia, Norway, Iceland, Denmark, Canada, and the U.S. all have expressed interest in exploring and establishing claims in the far north.
The Gulf oil disaster has demonstrated some of the risks of deep-sea resource exploration. But increasing resource demand means that drilling and exploration will certainly continue, which only enhances the importance of establishing EEZs in disputed areas.
-
Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) Rankings by area
-
It's interesting how some states have an EEZ multiple times their land size because each tiny island/atoll adds an extra 200 nautical miles of EEZ for that state. So a country like Fed. States of Micronesia has an EEZ that is 4,000 times larger than their land area (of 702 km²)
A more normal example would be Greece having EEZ four times greater than its land area, partly because it controls most of the Aegean sea islands. Makes sense why there are such strongly contested and overlapping claims there between Turkey and Greece. Or in Spratly/Paracels between Asian states.