Registration / Login
text version
War and Peace

 Hot news

Main page » News » View
Printable version
US-Canada Arctic border dispute key to maritime riches
02.08.10 21:31 Americas on the move

By Sian Griffiths BBC News, Ottawa
Canada and the United States are beginning a five-week joint Arctic survey, part of which will take place in a section of the energy-rich Beaufort Sea that is claimed by both countries.

The survey is intended to help the neighbours determine the extent of their continental shelves.

The bi-national study is part of an ongoing race by the Arctic nations - the US, Canada, Russia, Norway and Denmark - to gather evidence to submit claims under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).

It could grant them exploitation rights to potential energy and mineral wealth above and below the sea floor.

Currently, coastal nations can claim exploitation rights in an Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ) - a 200-mile (322km) nautical area beyond their land territory.

If the Arctic nations can prove that their submerged territory extends beyond 200 miles, they could gain access to vast untapped resources which lie beneath the pristine waters of the polar region.

However, a major obstacle for Canada and the US is the uncertainty over how their Arctic maritime boundary should be defined.

"Canada and the United States need this data, both to delineate the continental shelf and to assist in the eventual resolution of the Beaufort Sea maritime boundary dispute," explained Canadas Foreign Affairs minister, Lawrence Cannon, in a press release describing why the two countries were co-operating on this mission.

Treaty claim

UNCLOS, which Canada has ratified and which the US has expressed a desire to ratify, has focused the attention of the two neighbours on their unresolved Arctic boundary, according to Professor Donald McRae of Ottawa University.

"The dispute really only dates from around the 1970s, because until the 200-mile zones came into existence, states paid little attention to maritime boundaries," Professor McRae, also a member of the UN International Law Commission, told the BBC.

The US claimed its 200-mile zone in 1976; Canada in 1977.

But the roots of Canadas claim are historical - based on an 1825 treaty between Russia and Great Britain, the countries which possessed Alaska and Canada in the 19th century.

Russia sold Alaska to the United States in 1867 while Great Britain handed its Canadian possessions to Canada when it became an independent country.

Canadas interpretation of the treaty, written in French, is that the maritime boundary extends north of the Alaska-Yukon border into the sea.

However, the US rejects Canadas claim that the treaty fixes a maritime border. Instead, it bases its claim on the equidistance method, "a line drawn so it is equidistant from the coasts of both parties," explains Professor McRae.

On a map, the resulting overlap in border claims resembles a pie-slice, approximately the size of Lake Ontario - one of North Americas Great Lakes, covering a vast area of just over 21,000 sq km.

Pressure to drill

While there was previously no pressure to resolve a border in a remote, icy, inhospitable region, the stakes have increased for both countries with the discovery of vast hydrocarbon deposits in the disputed area.

According to figures made available to the BBC by Canadas National Energy Board, the seabed below the disputed area is eye-wateringly resource-rich, containing a potential 1.7bn cubic metres of gas - enough gas to supply Canada for 20 years - and over 1bn cubic metres of oil.

The US has called a moratorium on any American offshore drilling pending a review of the Gulf of Mexico spill while Canada is currently considering bids from companies interested in offshore exploration.

However, no drilling is due to to take place in Canadas Arctic waters until the National Energy Board has completed its review of offshore drilling.

But before any further development can take place, the border question has to be resolved.

Last month, it was revealed that quiet negotiations, a "dialogue of experts", began in Ottawa with the approval of Mr Cannon and US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. A second meeting is due to take place in Washington next year.

Ironically, says Professor McRae, beyond 200 miles "the Canadian line is better for the US - and the US line better for Canada".

This strange twist could actually be the key to resolving this outstanding border issue - to the great benefit of both parties, according to University of British Columbia law professor and Arctic expert Michael Byers.

"All of a sudden, we have this almost perfect opportunity for a win-win, negotiated solution," said Professor Byers in an interview with the Ottawa Citizen earlier this year.

"Regardless of which method you use [to determine the boundary], each country is going to get a substantial amount of what is the new disputed sector - the perfect recipe for a negotiated compromise".

And with the territory comes access to the huge energy and mineral wealth lying beneath the waters.
 

Ðóññêèé
Archive
Forum

 Exclusiveread more rss

» Destruction of Ukraine’s Central Bank
» The World files their 27 Grievances against the United States of America.
» Yom Kippur War Redux – Petrol D0llar’s Last Hurrah
» How the Alchemists saved the Planet in 2019
» What will the US Treaty of Paris look like?
» Addition by Subtraction, (x, y)↦x−y
» Too Little, Too Late, will there be a Romanov ending for the Sudairi Seven?
» Week 21: When economic arguments end, the arms race begins

 Newsread more rss

» Afghan Taliban leader accuses U.S. of creating doubts over pact
» Kyrgyz President Accuses Atambayev of Violating Constitution by Resisting Detention
» Chinese foreign ministry slams U.S. interference in Venezuela
» With an eye on Russia, China and a horse, Pentagon chief visits Mongolia
» Pentagon Claims Iran Uses GPS Jamming in the Gulf So It Can Lure and Seize Foreign Ships
» USAF X-37B Military Space Planes Mystery Mission Circling Earth Hits 700 Days
» China destabilizing Indo-Pacific: U.S. Defense Secretary
» EU must change its negotiating terms for Brexit, says Barclay

 Reportsread more rss

» A Brief History of the CIA’s Dirty War in South Sudan
» US GDP report: Keynes on steroids
» Are Russia and the US Finally on the Same Page in Afghanistan?
» The IMF Takeover of Pakistan
» Voices from Syria’s Rukban Refugee Camp Belie Corporate Media Reporting
» Report Shows Corporations and Bolsonaro Teaming Up to Destroy the Amazon
» Ukraine: the presidents change, but the oligarchical system remains the same
» The Cowardice of Aung San Suu Kyi

 Commentariesread more rss

» The Biggest Threat to the US Indo-Pacific Strategy? Washington Itself.
» Ukraine on the cusp of change
» India’s Looming Agricultural Crisis: A Unique Chance to Change the System?
» The Saker interviews Stephen Karganovic
» Media and Politicians Ignore Oncoming Financial Crisis
» In an astonishing turn, George Soros and Charles Koch team up to end US ‘forever war’ policy
» Vladimir Putin says liberalism has ‘become obsolete’
» You Are Fighting In The Most Important Battle Of All Time

 Analysisread more rss

» A battle for supremacy between China and the US
» UAE Withdrawal from Yemen
» US, Pakistan move in tandem to end Afghan war
» Is Baoshang Bank China’s Lehman Brothers?
» From the Green Revolution to GMOs: Toxic Agriculture Is the Problem Not the Solution
» OPEC+ oil supply cuts signal smooth Gulf sailing
» G20 Osaka: the end of American leadership?
» Trump’s Brilliant Strategy to Dismember U.S. Dollar Hegemony
 
text version The site was founded by Natalia Laval in 2006 © 2006-2026 Inca Group "War and Peace"