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High Seas Treaty

Posted 22 Aug 2024

Updated 29 Aug 2024

7 min read

Why in the news?

Union Cabinet has approved India to sign the Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction (BBNJ) Agreement, also known as the High Seas Treaty. The Ministry of Earth Sciences will spearhead its implementation.

What are High Seas?

  • Definition: High seas are areas outside the national jurisdiction of any country.
    • Typically, national jurisdictions extend up to 200 nautical miles (370 km) from the coastline, an area called Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ).
  • Global Commons: High Seas constitute about 64%, roughly two-thirds, of the total ocean area and are considered global commons
    • They belong to no one, and everyone enjoys equal rights for navigation, overflight, economic activities, scientific research, or laying of infrastructure like undersea cables.

BBNJ Agreement 

  • Name: It is formally called the Agreement on Conservation and Sustainable Use of Marine Biological Diversity of Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction.
  • Under UNCLOS: It is an international treaty under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). 
    • BBNJ Agreement will be the third implementation agreement under UNCLOS if and when it enters into force, alongside its sister implementation agreements: 
      • 1994 Part XI Implementation Agreement (which addresses the exploration and extraction of mineral resources in the international seabed area) and 
      • 1995 UN Fish Stocks Agreement (which addresses the conservation and management of straddling and highly migratory fish stocks).
  • Adoption: Agreement was adopted in 2023 and is open for signature for two years. 
    • It will be an international legally binding treaty after it enters force 120 days after 60 countries ratify it. 
    • As of June 2024, 91 countries have signed the BBNJ Agreement, and eight Parties have ratified it.
  • Objective: To ensure the conservation and sustainable use of marine biological diversity of areas beyond national jurisdiction, for the present and in the long term. 
An infographic outlining the key guiding principles of an agreement. The principles displayed are Polluter Pays Principle, Principle of Common Heritage of Humankind, Freedom of Marine Scientific Research, Principle of Equity and Fair/Equitable Sharing of Benefits, Precautionary Principle, Ecosystem Approach, and Use of Traditional Knowledge of Indigenous Peoples. Each principle is accompanied by a relevant icon.

Key Provisions of BBNJ Agreement

A flowchart detailing the financial resources and mechanisms of the BBNJ Treaty. It includes assessed contributions for BBNJ's institutions and a voluntary trust fund for state participation. The financial mechanism includes a special trust fund, a global facility, and various projects.
  • Scope of application: It applies to Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction (ABNJ), which include the high seas. 
    • It does not apply to any warship, military aircraft or naval auxiliary.
    • Only Part-II, which deals with Marine Genetic Resources, applies to any government vessel in non-commercial service.
  • Institutional Arrangement: Treaty establishes: 
    • Conference of Parties (COP): COP will consist of the Parties to the Treaty and is the main decision-making body (except for certain matters on environmental impact assessments). 
    • Scientific and Technical Body (STB): STB will provide scientific and technical advice to the COP. 
    • Clearing-House Mechanism (CHM): CHM will be primarily an open-access platform and serve as a centralized platform. 
      • It will enable Parties to access, provide and disseminate information on the four substantive elements of the BBNJ Treaty.
    • Subject-Matter Committees: These include access and benefit-sharing committee, capacity-building and transfer of marine technology committee, finance committee, and Implementation and Compliance Committee.
  • Financial Mechanism: It establishes a financial mechanism that will provide adequate, accessible, additional and predictable financial resources, which will function under COP. 

Four Substantive Elements of BBNJ Treaty

Marine Genetic Resources, including the fair and equitable sharing of benefits

  • Marine Genetic Resource (MGR): MGR is any material of marine plant, animal, microbial or other origin containing functional units of heredity of actual or potential value.
  • Benefit sharing: Treaty established a mechanism for a fair and equitable sharing of benefits associated with MGRs of ABNJ and associated Digital Sequence Information (DSI). 
    • There is yet no consensus on definition of DSI. Presently, its definition ranges from narrow (DNA and RNA) to broad (which include DNA, RNA, Protein, Metabolites, traditional knowledge, ecological interactions etc.)
  • Traditional Knowledge: MGR Mechanism also takes into consideration the rights and obligations associated with traditional knowledge of Indigenous Peoples and local communities. 
  • No Sovereign Rights: No country must claim or exercise sovereignty or sovereign rights over MGRs of ABNJ. 

Measures such as Area-Based Management Tools, including Marine Protected Areas

  • Area-Based Management Tool (ABMT): It aims at establishment of well-connected networks of Marine Protected Areas. 
  • Marine Protected Area (MPA): An MPA provides protection for all or part of the natural resources within it by prohibiting or limiting certain activities that could harm its biodiversity.
    • To date, the largest international MPA is in Antarctica’s Ross Sea, established by the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources.

Environmental Impact Assessments (EIAs)

  • EIA Framework: Agreement provides an EIA framework (i.e., global standard) for identifying and evaluating the potential impacts of an activity in ABNJ.
  • EIA Requirement: Agreement directs parties to communicate EIA reports to the Clearing-House Mechanism.

Capacity-Building and the Transfer of Marine Technology

  • Mechanism: Agreement requires parties to develop and implement mechanisms for capacity building, including financing research programs and dedicated initiatives, to help developing nations.
  • Initiatives: Capacity Building initiatives may include sharing data and information in user friendly formats; information dissemination, such as marine scientific research and EIAs; and developing and strengthening national regulatory frameworks.

Significance of BBNJ Agreement

  • Biodiversity Conservation: By checking overexploitation of resources, biodiversity loss, pollution, including dumping of plastics, ocean acidification, and many other problems. 
    • According to UN estimates, about 17 million tonnes of plastics were dumped in the oceans in 2021.
  • Mitigating impacts of Climate Change: On marine ecosystems, such as warming, ocean deoxygenation, ocean acidification, etc.
  • Equitable economic order: Agreement will help realize a just and equitable international economic order which takes into account the interests and needs of developing States, whether coastal or landlocked.
  • Significance for India: 
    • Strategic expansion: BBNJ Agreement allows India to enhance its strategic presence in areas beyond our EEZ (Exclusive Economic Zone), which is very promising. 
    • Resource Benefits: In addition to shared monetary benefits, it will strengthen India’s marine conservation efforts and collaborations, open newer avenues for scientific research, capacity building and technology transfer, etc.
  • Promotion of traditional knowledge: It follows an inclusive, integrated, ecosystem-centric approach based on the precautionary principle and promotes using traditional knowledge. 

Conclusion

A growing recognition of critical role of the vast oceanic realm has led to finalization of long-awaited BBNJ agreement. The agreement will play a crucial role in achieving the recent ambitious “30x30” initiative to protect 30% of marine ecosystems by 2030. 

UN Convention on Laws of the Seas (UNCLOS)

Diagram illustrating maritime zones, including baseline, continent, scientific continental shelf, slope, rise, abyssal plain, territorial sea, contiguous zone, exclusive economic zone, and outer continental shelf. Labels show sovereignty levels over various nautical miles.
  • UNCLOS is a comprehensive international law that lays down the broad frameworks for legitimate behaviour on, and use of, seas and oceans everywhere. 
    • It was adopted in 1982 and came into force in 1994.
  • State Parties: UNCLOS has now achieved almost universal acceptance (170 State Parties including India) and is often referred to as the “constitution of the oceans”.
  • Provisions: It defines the rights and duties of nations regarding activities in the oceans, and also addresses issues such as sovereignty, passage rights, and rights of exclusive economic usages. 
  • International Seabed Authority (ISA): It establishes the ISA to regulate mining and related activities on the ocean floor beyond national jurisdiction. 
  • Territorial demarcation: UNCLOS demarcates different zones of the oceans as follows: 
    • Territorial Sea: It extends up to 12 nautical miles from shore and coastal States have full sovereignty here.
    • Contiguous Zone: It extends up to 24 nautical miles and acts as a buffer zone in which the coastal State has limited enforcement authority to prevent infringements in its territorial zone.
    • Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ): It can extend up to 200 nautical miles and coastal States do not have full sovereignty, but have sovereign rights and jurisdiction for the exploitation, conservation and management of marine resources.
    • High Sea: It encompasses any part of the sea that does not fall into any of the other zones and is therefore outside of the jurisdiction of any state.
  • Seabed zoning system: For the seabed, subsoil and resources therein, UNCLOS established a zoning system as follows:
    • Continental shelf: It can extend beyond a State’s territorial sea and even EEZ if it is naturally contiguous, and a State holds sovereign rights for exploration and exploitation of its resources.
    • Area: It is common heritage of humankind and activities related to seabed mineral resources shall be carried out for the benefit of humankind as a whole.
  • Tags :
  • High Seas Treaty
  • Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction (BBNJ) Agreement
  • EEZ
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