World's Oceans and Polar Frontiers
Read this text to learn more about the human interest in this landscape.
Over
70 percent of the entire surface of the world is covered with water,
but who controls it? If the body of water is inland, ownership is quite
clear. A lake in the interior of a state belongs to that state. For the
96.5 percent of the world's water that's held in oceans, however,
ownership is much less clear. Historically, the world's oceans were
considered the "high seas" and while states had control over their
immediate coastline extending out three miles, the vast stretches high
seas were free from ownership. As ocean resources became more important,
however, countries became interested in establishing clear rights to
minerals, oil, and fishing stocks offshore.
In
1945, President Harry S. Truman announced that the sovereign territory
of the United States extended to the boundary of its continental shelf,
which was in some places hundreds of miles offshore. Other countries,
including Chile, Peru, and Ecuador, followed suit, beginning an
international dash to claim offshore waters. Within two decades,
countries were using a variety of systems of ownership; some claimed
waters three miles offshore, others 12 miles, and still others
maintained ownership over all of the waters to the continental shelf.
Eventually,
the United Nations intervened, seeking a universal system of ocean
ownership. The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS)
resulted from series of international conferences and established
guidelines for maritime travel and control of natural resources found in
the world's seas. As a result of the UNCLOS, there are now several
categories of ownership over the world's water depending on its distance
from shore (see Figure 10.6). A state's internal waters are considered
the sovereign territory of a state. Territorial waters extended
12 miles offshore and are also considered sovereign territory of a
state. However, in territorial waters, a state must grant "innocent
passage" to oceangoing vessels, meaning it must allow the vessel to pass
through as long as it is doing so in a speedy manner that is not
threatening the security of a state. Beyond the territorial waters, a
state can control certain aspects of a 12 mile contiguous zone,
including taxation and pollution. Following the US claim of control over
the continental shelf, the UNCLOS established that a 200 mile zone
extending out from a country's coastline was its exclusive economic zone,
or EEZ, where it has exclusive control over any natural resources.
Other countries can fly over or pass through the waters of the EEZ, but
cannot use the resources within. However, countries are free to sell,
lease, or share the rights to their EEZ. Beyond the EEZ are
international waters where no state has direct control.
Figure 10.6: International Sea Rights Established by the UNCLOS (© historicair, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0)
As a result of the UNCLOS, some tiny islands gained immense stretches of ocean territory – and the rights to the resources in and underneath those waters (see Figure 10.7). Some countries found this as an opportunity to expand their resource area. Conflicts developed over what would otherwise be tiny specks of island territory but what had become over 100,000 nautical miles of ocean resources. Particularly as the technology for offshore drilling improved, states sought to secure control of what could be huge caches of oil and minerals.
Figure 10.7: Map of International Waters (© Kvasir, Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 3.0)
The
UNCLOS also established some ownership over the Arctic Ocean. Russia,
Norway, Canada, the United States, and Denmark, which controls
Greenland, all have overlapping EEZs in the Arctic. Historically, this
frigid, isolated region was of little interest to countries. Early
attempts at exploration were largely unsuccessful and a person wouldn't
reach the North Pole until the early 20th century. However, the drive to
secure fossil fuels has led to more intensive research and exploration
in the region and as much as one-quarter of the entire world's oil and
natural gas reserves are believed to lie below Arctic waters. Global
increases in temperature could further open up previously inaccessible
areas of the Arctic to drilling operations. A 2015 declaration signed by
all five states surrounding the Arctic prohibited fishing in the
central Arctic Ocean in an effort to protect ocean life and resources.
In
the South Pole, Antarctica remains a frontier region with no permanent
human inhabitants, though the continent is home to penguins, fur seals,
and other marine creatures. Antarctica does have a number of research
stations as well as an Orthodox Church and a few thousand people work in
and around Antarctica in various times of the year conducting
scientific research. Antarctica is the coldest place in the world, once
dropping down to -89.2 °C (-128.6 °F) at a Russian research station.
Although Antarctica might look relatively moist and snow covered, it is
actually a desert with very little precipitation.
So
who controls this vast expanse of frozen desert? The answer depends on
who you ask. Several different countries claim control of Antarctic
territories (see Figure 10.8) but, in general, these states do not
recognize each other's claims.
Figure 10.8: Map of Research Stations and Antarctic Territorial Claims (CIA World Factbook, Public Domain)
In
1959, the Antarctic Treaty was signed that put a hold on new
territorial claims, established Antarctica as a zone for scientific
research and environmental protection, and prohibited military activity
in the region. A later treaty signed in 1998 reaffirmed Antarctica as a
peaceful, scientific frontier and prohibited mining on the continent.
Source: Caitlin Finlayson, https://worldgeo.pressbooks.com/chapter/oceania/#chapter-359-section-2
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 License.