Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 December 2021
The international law of the sea is premised on the fact that maritime entitlements are generated by the coast. This is rooted in the assumption that territory is permanent and, consequently, a relatively stable basis for the division of jurisdictional zones at sea. However, sea level rise and coastal erosion are currently tearing at the foundation of all maritime entitlements, in ways that were not anticipated by the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.
Sea levels are rising and they will continue to rise, by several metres if the ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica become unstable. Ocean warming and acidification are increasing; threatening marine ecosystems and leading to loss of biodiversity. Extreme weather events, floods, hurricanes and extreme waves are becoming frequent in most parts of the world. These changes will affect the living conditions of at least 300 million people by 2050. They will also affect marine ecosystems, islands, rocks, shoals, reefs and the maritime entitlements they generate. The consequences will be particularly severe for low-lying island States and some of them may cease to exist when they lose all habitable territory.
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