a brief overview of u.s. arctic policy and the u.s. extended continental shelf project
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A Brief Overview of U.S. Arctic Policy and the U.S. Extended Continental Shelf Project. Brian Van Pay Office of Ocean and Polar Affairs U.S. Department of State. Arctic Domain Awareness Conference National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency St. Louis, Missouri March 4-5, 2009. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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A Brief Overview of U.S. Arctic Policy and the U.S. Extended Continental Shelf Project
Brian Van PayOffice of Ocean and Polar Affairs
U.S. Department of State
Arctic Domain Awareness ConferenceNational Geospatial-Intelligence Agency
St. Louis, MissouriMarch 4-5, 2009
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Where is the Arctic?
Where is the Arctic Ocean?
All land, submerged lands, and water north of Arctic Circle (66º33’39’’N) U.S. Arctic Research Commission statute includes Bering Sea and a
portion of land area of Alaska below the Arctic Circle Canadian Arctic Waters Pollution Prevention Act includes all Canadian
land and waters north of 60º N Denmark considers all of Greenland and the Faroe Islands as Arctic Biogregions (tree line, where permafrost begins, etc)
Definition adopted by IHO in 1953.
Neither has a definitive and obvious extent. The United States has an interest in not subscribing to one particular definition for all purposes. Rather each definition serves its own purpose.
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International Law in the Arctic
Convention on the Law of the Sea Various IMO agreements Numerous treaties (Stockholm Convention, 1973 Treaty on
the Conservation of Polar Bears, UNFCCC, etc) So-called “soft law” applicable to the Arctic Ocean (IMO
guidelines, Arctic Council Guidelines, etc). All five coastal States (U.S., Russia, Canada, Norway, and
Denmark/Greenland) stated in the Illulissat Declaration that there is no need for a comprehensive Arctic treaty.
U.S. is open to discussing the need for other agreements (e.g. fisheries, SAR).
There are many sources of international law that are applicable to the Arctic Ocean, and, more importantly, available to enhance the security, environmental protection, and safety of navigation of the Arctic Ocean.
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Arctic NSPD/HSPD
New policy released January 9, 2009 Extensive interagency discussions, led by State Addresses 7 themes:
National Security and Homeland Security International Governance Extended Continental Shelf and Boundary Issues Promoting International Scientific Cooperation Maritime Transport Economic Issues, including Energy Environmental Protection and Conservation of Natural Resources
Identifies lead agency or agencies for each theme. Written in a manner that it would represent enduring U.S. interests
and could remain as official U.S. policy from one administration to the next.
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Arctic Council
Established in 1996. Membership limited to States with land north of the Arctic Circle
and “Permanent Participants” representing indigenous peoples. There are also observer States and organizations.
Only diplomatic forum focused on the entire Arctic. Senior Arctic Officials (SAOs) and permanent participants jointly
coordinate Council operations. Arctic Council Ministers meet every 2 years. Chairmanship
rotates among the member States every 2 years. Work is project-driven and focused on environmental protection
and sustainable development. Military security is excluded. Substantive work takes place mostly in six working groups. Various assessments and reports often result in
recommendations on actions to be taken by member States and organizations.
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Challenges Ahead: Climate
Climate change is having a dramatic impact on Arctic ecosystems and Arctic residents.
The science of climate in the Arctic is generally two-pronged: Looking at effects of climate change on the Arctic. Change is happening
faster in the Arctic than in any other region in the world. Science is trying to understand the way in which changes in the Arctic affect
global climate, as well as the way global climate change feeds back into the changes taking place in the Arctic.
The recently-concluded IPY has contributed much to this understanding, and results will continue to be analyzed over the coming years.
The U.S. and others have maintained the proper place for setting climate policy is in the UNFCCC process.
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Challenges Ahead: Search and Rescue (SAR)
Tourism is increasing. Concern there are not adequate SAR resources or ships adequately equipped for operating in the harsh environment.
Destinational shipping is expected to increase in the short term and trans-Arctic shipping is expected to increase in the long term.
The U.S. has proposed to the Arctic Council the creation of a special task force on search and rescue in the Arctic that we anticipate will be approved at the April Ministerial.
We expect the task force will assess the current status of: the patchwork of SAR instruments in the region identifying gaps in the existing instruments looking at ways to move forward to enhance
SAR in the Arctic in the face of anticipated use.
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Challenges Ahead: ShippingArctic Marine Shipping Assessment (AMSA)
U.S. is a lead country, along with Canada and Finland, on the first ever Arctic Marine Shipping Assessment (AMSA).
The final assessment is expected to be approved and released at the April 29 Tromsø Ministerial meeting of the Arctic Council.
Comprehensive review of the history, current status, and likely future of shipping in the Arctic.
Includes findings and recommendations that will hopefully inform the policies of Arctic States and others with a stake in Arctic shipping.
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Media AttentionExtended Continental Shelf
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1982 Convention on the Law of the Sea
“Constitution of the Oceans” maritime zones, freedom of navigation, fishing, marine
scientific research, piracy, marine pollution… Entered into force on November 16, 1994 157 Parties
Three LOS Institutions Established: International Seabed Authority (ISA) International Tribunal on the Law of the Sea (ITLOS) Commission on Limits of Continental Shelf (CLCS)
U.S. has not acceded Must go to Senate Foreign Relations Committee
(SFRC) for a vote before it can be sent to Senate floor
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Under international law, every coastal State gets a 200-mile shelf automatically.
Some coastal States can claim an extended continental shelf beyond 200 miles IF the shelf meets the criteria under Article 76 of the Law of the Sea Convention
1982 Convention on the Law of the Sea
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Article 76: Paragraph 4Formula Lines: Two Options
Sediments
Oceanic crustCrystalline continental crust
Foot of the slope
60nm
100 200 300 4000
nautical miles (nm)
Coast/B
asel
ine
EEZ 200
nm
1% of distance to foot of slope
Paragraph 4: 4(a)ii – FOS + 60M 4(a)i – FOS & sediment thickness
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Article 76: Paragraph 5Constraints to the ECS Limit: Two Options
Sediments
Oceanic crustCrystalline continental crust
2,500 m isobath
2,500 m isobath + 100 nm
350 nm
Max
1
Max
2
100 200 300 4000
nautical miles (nm)
Coast/B
asel
ine
EEZ 200
nm
Paragraph 5: Max 1: 350 nm from baselines OR Max 2: 2,500 m isobath plus 100 nm
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ECS Data Collection
Bathymetric Data Seismic Data
Baselines(i.e. updated charts)
Other Supporting Data(gravity, magnetic, samples, etc)
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Why does it matter?
The U.S., like other countries, has an inherent interest in knowing, and declaring to others, the exact extent of our sovereign rights.
Sovereign rights over the natural resources of seabed and subsoil: mineral resources (manganese nodules, ferromanganese crusts, and polymetallic sulfides,
etc) petroleum (oil, gas, and gas hydrates) “sedentary” species (clams, crabs, scallops, sponges, corals, mollusks, etc)
Defining those rights in concrete geographical terms provides the specificity and certainty necessary to protect, manage, and/or use those resources.
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The U.S. Extended Continental ShelfMore than 1 million square kilometers
The United States has an extended continental shelf (ECS) that is more than 1 million square kilometers—an area nearly half of the Louisiana Purchase and with energy and mineral resources that are likely worth many billions.
Defining and establishing the limits of the ECS in concrete geographical terms will enable the U.S. to exercise its sovereign rights over these resources with significantly greater certainty -- whether we choose to use or conserve those resources.
Coast/Baseline 200 nautical miles
Extended Continental Shelf (ECS)Continental Shelf
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How to Establish an ECS
Conduct a study with existing data Collect additional data, especially
bathymetric and seismic Analyze data and identify ECS limits
LOS Party Makes submission to CLCS CLCS reviews, makes
recommendations to Coastal State
Limits “final and binding”
LOS Non-Party Can establish outer limits but
doesn’t get benefit of Convention procedures to maximize international recognition and legal certainty
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Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf (CLCS)
A coastal State submits its coordinates, data, and analyses to CLCS.
21 members, all scientists. Elected by State Parties. Executive summary and coordinates are posted on its
public website. No provision for the disclosure of the submission or supporting data.
Subcommission of seven members reviews individual submissions.
No mandate to settle boundary disputes. If the coastal State establishes its ECS limits “on the
basis of” CLCS recommendations, those limits are “final and binding.”
Purpose? International recognition.
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Other Countries
About 60 countries have an ECS A majority have begun work to define their shelf 18 of those countries have made a submission in whole or in part:
Russia Brazil Australia Ireland New Zealand “FISU” Joint Submission France (New Caledonia and French Guiana) Ireland Norway Mexico
Bahamas United Kingdom (Ascension Island) Indonesia Japan Seychelles/Mauritius Joint Submission Suriname Burma France (French Antilles and the
Kerguelen Islands )
5 recommendations issued in whole or part: Russia Brazil Australia Ireland New Zealand
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Australia’s ECS3,371,990 square km, or 45% of Australia’s land mass
ECS
ECS
EEZ
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In April 2007, the Interagency Committee on Ocean Science and Resource Management Integration (ICOSRMI), Co-chaired by the Office of Science and Technology Policy and the Council on Environmental Quality, established the Extended Continental Shelf Task Force. The Task Force is chaired by the Department of State with co-vice chairs from the Department of the Interior and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The Task Force is to coordinate the collection and analysis of relevant data and prepare the necessary documentation to establish the limits of the U.S. continental shelf in accordance with international law.
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What has been done so far?
Bathymetric Data Collection (more than 1 million square kilometers from 13 cruises) Arctic Ocean (2003, 2004, 2007, 2008) Gulf of Alaska (2005) Gulf of Mexico (2007) Atlantic Ocean (2004, 2005, 2008) Northern Marina Islands & Guam (2006, 2007) Bering Sea (2003)
Seismic Data Collection (more than 2,700 linear kilometers) Arctic Ocean (2008)
Data Management Developing metadata standards for bathymetric and
seismic data (2008) Developing a long-term data management and
preservation strategy (2008) Planning
Held 4 regional geology workshops with experts from industry and academia.
Northern Mariana Islands
East Coast
Gulf of Mexico
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What work is left? Planning
Project Plan, due June 2009 Determine priorities Execute remaining work
Data Collection Additional bathymetric data required (Arctic,
Gulf of Alaska, Continental West Coast, Pacific Islands)
Additional seismic data required (Arctic, Continental East Coast, possibly elsewhere)
Analysis and Compilation Construct a Geographic Information System Apply formula and constraint lines Document legal and scientific approaches
PlanningPlanning Data Data CollectionCollection
Analysis and Analysis and CompilationCompilation
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Arctic Data Collection Missions
2003 U.S. bathymetric data collection from Healy (10 days)
2004 U.S. bathymetric data collection from Healy (20 days)
2007 U.S. bathymetric data collection from Healy (30 days) Canadian seismic data collection from Louis S. St.
Laurent with a U.S. Observer onboard (60 days)
2008 U.S. bathymetric data collection from Healy (23 days, Aug
14-Sept 5) Joint U.S. – Canadian seismic (from Louis) and
bathymetric (from Healy) data collection (Joint mission is 26 days, Sept 6-Oct 3, but Canada collected seismic data for ~42 days)
2009 Healy and Louis cooperatively collecting seismic and
bathymetric data in the Arctic for 41 days (Aug 7-Sept 16).
2010 Healy and Louis likely working together again.
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Why Cooperate? Mutual interest to define continental shelf
in the Arctic
Saves millions for both countries
It’s Canada and the U.S.—we’re friends. And we also have a long history of scientific collaboration.
Utilize collective, rare expertise, especially given the challenges of the Arctic.
Collect data only once over the same area
Provide data the other needs Canada has a proven multi-channel seismic
system that works in ice-covered conditions The Healy has a multibeam bathymetric
system and can clear a path
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Maximizing the Effort (Science)
Dendritic drainage patterns off Northern Mariana Islands
Healy SeamountMystery Grooves Iceberg Scours
Guyots off Northern Mariana Islands, one less than 7 meters from surface
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Maximizing the Effort (Science)Dredge Samples
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Common Misconceptions
The following are not accurate: A State claims an extended continental shelf. The CLCS approves a State’s continental shelf. The CLCS is part of the United Nations. Defining an ECS is an Arctic-only endeavor. The U.S. does not have ECS unless we accede
to the Convention. Climate change is the stimulus for defining an
ECS in the Arctic. This is a race for resources. Russia is taking U.S. ECS. Maritime boundaries in the Arctic are different.
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Brian Van PayOffice of Ocean and Polar Affairs
U.S. Department of [email protected]
202-647-5123
Julie GourleySenior Arctic [email protected]
202-647-3264
Questions?Questions?