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IN THE NEWS: Time to Ratify the Law of the Sea
Don KrausForeign Policy in Focus
June 3, 2007
From space, the Earth looks like a fragile drop of blue, green, brown, and white floating in a sea of black. National borders are not visible. But the vast oceans and seas are. What from space appears to be humanity’s common heritage, however, is the subject of considerable dispute.
During the Nixon administration negotiations began to create a common set of rules for how nations use our oceans. Now, almost 40 years later, the
An incredibly diverse group of organizations and trade associations – including environmental, oil industry, peace, and veterans groups -- have come together to put this important piece of old business back on the agenda. The reasons these odd bedfellows back the treaty are as varied as their missions. But together they elicited support from the White House and Senate leadership and have opened a small window of opportunity for LOS ratification.
Ratification is not a sure thing even though the Bush administration has urged support. If the Senate doesn’t act on ratification before the summer recess, it may miss this golden opportunity to address the increasing fragility of the oceans.
Why We Need the Law
The Law of the Sea has been described as the most comprehensive and progressive protection for the oceans of any modern international accord. It essentially protects the economic, environmental, and national security concerns of coastal states, as well as establishing international cooperative mechanisms for resolving disputes on these issues. The convention also safeguards imperiled marine habitats by strengthening state sovereignty over the enforcement of environmental regulations up to 200 miles offshore (called the Exclusive Economic Zone – EEZ). These internationally accepted regulations empower states to stop harmful pollution and ocean dumping caused by previously unregulated ships. The convention also contains special measures to save endangered whales, salmon, and other marine mammals. It helps the fisheries of coastal states by allowing them to set limits within their EEZ. It also protects valuable migratory fish stocks such as tuna and billfish on the high seas, beyond the 200-mile limit.
In addition to protection of the marine environment, the LOS promotes the maintenance of international peace and security by replacing a plethora of conflicting claims among coastal states with a 12-mile territorial limit and the aforementioned 200-mile EEZ. These regulations set a definitive limit on the oceanic area over which a nation may claim jurisdiction. However, the convention also protects the freedom of navigation on the high seas as well as the right of innocent passage, including non-wartime activities of military ships.
Nations can even claim mineral rights to the end of the continental shelf up to 350 nautical miles (and further in some special circumstances). This favors the
Beyond this zone the LOS has established the International Seabed Authority, an autonomous intergovernmental body based in
There is no overt role for NGO participation in the dispute resolution process, as there is in more recently negotiated treaties and agreements (such as NAFTA). However, environmental organizations see the various intergovernmental bodies established by the convention as forums where they can focus attention on the obligation of governments to “protect and preserve the marine environment” that the treaty establishes.
During the administration of George H.W. Bush, the
An Urgent Situation
Although the current Bush administration supports the convention, only in 2004 under Richard Lugar’s (R-IN) chairmanship did the Senate Foreign Relations Committee unanimously approve the Law of the Sea Convention. However, the White House was only willing to spend minimal political capital, and Senate leadership bowed to the pressure of a small group of far-right senators and never brought the treaty to the floor for a full vote.
Finally, on May 15, 2007, President Bush publicly urged the Senate to “to act favorably on
Now the ball is in Senate Foreign Relations Committee Chairman Joe Biden’s (D-DE) court. Biden is planning hearings this summer. However, some Senate staffers are concerned that if a final vote is not held on the treaty before the Senate goes into recess at the beginning of August, the window of opportunity will close because of the partisan pressures of the accelerated 2008 election cycle.
Biden and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid should take this issue very seriously. Their leadership is needed – and would be appreciated by diverse communities and industries. More importantly, approval of LOS would demonstrate that treaty ratification is not an impossible task in the U.S. Senate. At a moment when a host of key multilateral arms control, human rights, and environmental treaties await Senate action, this momentum could be crucial in regaining the respect of nations who want the
It’s time for the
Don Kraus is the vice president for government relations of Citizens for Global Solutions.









