1. Introduction
It was an afternoon in August 2022, at the United Nations (UN) Headquarters in New York. The international community was negotiating a new legally binding agreement on the high seas. After a lengthy debate as to whether ‘common heritage of mankind’ is a principle of international law or merely a concept,Footnote 1 a Chinese diplomat, echoing a speech just made by the Bangladeshi delegation, spoke emotionally of the West’s lack of political will to share the benefits arising from exploiting marine genetic resources in the Area – the seabed and ocean floor and subsoil thereof, beyond the limits of national jurisdiction.Footnote 2
This was a unique and déjà vu moment, reminiscent of the famous photo of Chinese Minister of Foreign Affairs Qiao Guanhua laughing heartily at the UN General Assembly in 1971.Footnote 3 That was the year in which the People’s Republic China (PRC) replaced the Republic of China (ROC) as the only legitimate representative of China to the UN.Footnote 4 Every child in mainland China was taught in high school history class that in the 1970s China stood firmly with developing countries against superpowers and hegemonies – the United States and Soviet Union, and aspired to achieve a new international economic order. It was the votes of the developing world that facilitated the PRC finally arriving at the UN.Footnote 5 Therefore, it was hardly surprising that China aligned closely with the Third World during the third United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS III, 1973–1982), inclusive of their prioritizing sovereignty and gaining their fair share of the benefits of the exploitation of the natural resources of the oceans.
In 2022, the international community celebrated the fortieth anniversary of the adoption of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS). Moreover, after decades of Working Group meetings,Footnote 6 Preparatory Committee meetings (PrepCom),Footnote 7 and six rounds of intergovernmental conferences (IGCs) between 2018 and 2023,Footnote 8 the Agreement under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea on the Conservation and Sustainable Use of Marine Biological Diversity of Areas beyond National Jurisdiction (BBNJ Agreement),Footnote 9 as the third implementing agreement of the UNCLOS,Footnote 10 was adopted on 19 June 2023. The BBNJ Agreement is an important international legal instrument, covering more than 60 per cent of the world’s oceans, which are high seas beyond national jurisdiction. It focuses on four major themes: marine genetic resources (MGRs), including benefit-sharing; area-based management tools (ABMTs), such as marine protected areas; environmental impact assessment (EIA); and capacity building and transfer of marine technology (CBTMT). The Chinese delegation engaged extensively with both the UNCLOS and BBNJ negotiations. China ratified UNCLOS in 1996; China has signed but not ratified the 1995 Fish Stocks Agreement (1995 FSA). China signed the BBNJ Agreement on 20 September 2023, although at the time of writing is yet to ratify the Agreement.
The world – and China, have, however, changed profoundly over the past four decades. When the UNCLOS was negotiated, China was among the least developed countries in the world.Footnote 11 In 2022, according to the World Bank, China’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) surpassed the whole 27 member states of the European Union (EU) and is about 70 per cent of the size of the United States.Footnote 12 By the time of the BBNJ negotiations, China had itself become a superpower, competing with the United States globally,Footnote 13 and is largely seen by the West as a challenger to the existing ‘rules-based order’.Footnote 14 Amid geopolitical tensions between the US and China, this article compares China’s stance during the UNCLOS negotiations – the starting point of contemporary law of the sea, with its engagement in the latest development of BBNJ negotiations. It answers the question, how does China participate in these two important rules-making processes of the international law of the sea? By identifying salient positions China took in each set of lengthy negotiations and explaining the reasons behind, the article also aims to reflect what a rising China may bring to the international legal maritime order in the foreseeable future.
The first part of this article, on the nature of China’s engagement in the UNCLOS negotiations, draws on archival study of official records of the UNCLOS III (1973–1982),Footnote 15 as has been digitalized by the UN Office of Legal Affairs. The second part examines the period between the adoption of the UNCLOS (1982) and the start of the BBNJ process (2004), paying attention to China’s shifting practice towards the exploration and exploitation of the deep seabed mineral resources, and its concerns over the ratification of the UNCLOS and the 1995 FSA. Then the article focuses on China in the BBNJ negotiations, built upon statements and submissions from the Chinese delegation as well as participation observation by the lead author during the fourth and fifth sessions of the Intergovernmental Conference on Marine Biodiversity in Areas beyond national jurisdiction (BBNJ IGC 4 and 5.1) in 2022. Drawing upon the evolution of China’s positions over the past five decades, the article concludes with some insights on the likely future directions and implications of China’s engagement with the international law of the sea.
2. China in the UNCLOS III (1973–1982)
The history of the law of the sea, its origin and development until the adoption of the UNCLOS, is largely western centric. Hugo Grotius wrote his famous book Mare Liberum (the freedom of the seas) to defend the Dutch East Indian Company’s trade interests at sea, especially in Southeast Asia, against the Portuguese exclusive jurisdiction of the oceans. For many countries in Asia and Africa, after the rise of colonial powers, be it Spanish, Portuguese, Dutch, French or the British Empire, the sea become a major source of threat to their sovereignty and national interests.Footnote 16 By the end of the Second World War, most third world countries were still European or American colonies, without independent sovereignty to determine their own affairs and future.
Although China has never been fully colonized by any western power, the country also went through ‘the century of humiliation’ after the first Sino-British/Opium War in 1840. China was forced to cede Hong Kong to the British following the unequal Treaty of Nanking (1842). The country suffered from foreign interference and invasions throughout the first half of the twentieth century.Footnote 17 The PRC was established in 1949. However, it was isolated from the US-anchored western world following the Korean War breaking out in 1950. US–China relations were significantly improved after Richard Nixon’s visit to China in 1972. UNCLOS negotiations began in 1973. PRC participation in the UNCLOS negotiations therefore signaled its re-emergence into the international arena, together with many developing countries, which also gained independence as a result of an UN-supported decolonization campaign in the 1960s.
On 17 December 1970, the General Assembly decided by resolution 2750 C (XXV),Footnote 18 to convene a third conference on the law of the sea in 1973. One hundred and sixty states participated the Third United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS III) for nine years. Those who gathered for the opening plenary recognized its historical significance for developing countries. According to UN Secretary General Kurt Waldheim:
It was the first Conference on the subject since the accession to independence of a large number of developing countries, a fact which gave it a very particular and historic significance… It knew enough to realize that it had a real and vital opportunity to establish the legal foundations which could reconcile present needs and interests with those of future generations. That opportunity arose at a time when a dominant concern of the United Nations was to close the gap between developing and developed countries, which had rightly been a major theme in the discussions in the preparatory stage and was a major concern of the Conference.Footnote 19
Developing countries formed the Group of 77 (G77) in 1964, with the aim of enhancing co-operation and their joint negotiating capacity in the UN and to work towards a new international economic order.Footnote 20 In 1967, Ambassador Arvid Pardo, then permanent representative of Malta to the UN, delivered his comprehensive speech to the UN General Assembly and urged the UN to consider ‘the vital political questions involved and clear legal provision be made for an international regime, administered by an efficient international authority over the sea-bed and the ocean floor beyond a variously defined continental shelf’.Footnote 21 Pardo suggested that in order to avoid advanced states in a race to scramble resources of the deep seabed and ocean floor beyond national jurisdiction, those resources should be the ‘common heritage of all mankind’.Footnote 22
The developing countries came to the UNCLOS III with ambitious objectives. They were major forces in driving the inclusion of new concepts in the UNCLOS, such as common heritage of mankind (CHM), archipelagic waters, and exclusive economic zone (EEZ). It was mentioned in the 1st Plenary Meeting of the UNCLOS III that:
It was essential to emphasize that the Conference would proceed on the basis of General Assembly resolution 2749 (XXV), Footnote 23 namely, that the sea-bed beyond national jurisdiction was the common heritage of all mankind. That fact in itself made the Conference unique; for the first time in history the representatives of States would be engaged in translating that vital concept into reality.Footnote 24
It is important to note, however, that the Convention aimed to be ‘comprehensive both in the sense of covering a wide range of issues governing five sevenths of the earth’s surface and to be widely acceptable’.Footnote 25 The interests of states diverged considerably and alliances tended to vary from issue to issue;Footnote 26 thus, for example, coastal states may have shared certain interests, but this did not correspond precisely to a North–South division amongst states.
China first made public its position on major issues in two working papers: those on the ‘Sea Area Within National Jurisdiction’ and on ‘Sea Area Beyond National Jurisdiction’ of 1973.Footnote 27 Based on official records of China’s participation in the UNCLOS III, China primarily aligned itself with the G77 and showed strong support for the developing countries’ struggle for a new international economic order. Nevertheless, throughout the negotiation, China’s leadership had a drastic shift from Mao Zedong to Deng Xiaoping in 1978. Consequently, Chinese diplomacy during the UNCLOS III could also be divided into two stages.
The first stage (1972–1977) largely fell under Mao Zedong (1893–1976)’s final years of leadership, during the cultural revolution. Even though the tension between the US and China was eased following US President Richard Nixon’s historical visit to China in 1972, Chinese diplomacy in those days can be said to have taken a revolutionary approach, meaning to oppose hegemony wherever possible. In Mao’s eyes, the world was divided into three camps, the first world being two superpowers (US and the Soviet Union), the second world being other developed western European countries and Japan, while the rest is the third world, including China. Moreover, bilateral relations between China and the Soviet Union had deteriorated dramatically in the 1960s, and reached their lowest point in 1969 when border conflict broke out in Zhenbao (Damansky) Island.Footnote 28 Therefore, ever since the first statement made by Chinese delegation, Footnote 29 the tone was set as ‘allying with developing countries,Footnote 30 fighting against hegemonies. Footnote 31 China openly attacked two super powers, expressing opposition to their ‘maritime hegemony’. Chinese diplomats singled out the Soviet Union several times, calling them for example, ‘the super-power that flaunted the banner of socialism’; Footnote 32 the ‘super-Power which claimed to be the natural ally of the developing countries’;Footnote 33 and ’Ambitious Soviet social-imperialism’.Footnote 34
During this period, Chinese diplomats repeatedly raised concerns about fair and equitable participation in the negotiation process;Footnote 35 this is an issue for developing countries on many occasions of international negotiations due to the lack of capacity and resources. Moreover, China actively advocated for those newly independent countries to continue their negotiations in between the formal sessions of the UNCLOS III.Footnote 36
China was also supportive of establishing the new regime of 200 nautical miles EEZs, as suggested by Latin American countries.Footnote 37 The UN General Assembly recognized the right to permanent sovereignty over natural resources in 1972 and 1973,Footnote 38 which provided a legal basis for newly independent developing countries to expand their jurisdiction at sea up to 200 nautical miles to protect their fisheries and other marine resources.Footnote 39 China regarded the EEZ regime as the third world countries’ struggle against ‘super-Power maritime hegemony’.Footnote 40 Further, this was an issue for PRC to develop diplomatic relations with several Latin American countries.Footnote 41 China rejected the notion that the economic zone should be considered part of the high seas. Footnote 42 It was China’s view that the coastal state should have the:
right to protect, use, explore and exploit all the natural resources in the zone, to adopt necessary measures and regulations to prevent the resources from being plundered, encroached on, damaged or polluted, and to exercise overall control and regulation of the marine environment and scientific research within the zone.Footnote 43
Nevertheless, it is important to note that, although the EEZ was a major innovation and tool that might help redistribute more evenly the benefits of ocean resource use, it was not that the US opposed it. Although the United States had initially been reluctant to support the extensive offshore jurisdictional claims it became apparent that the EEZ concept was not necessarily contrary to US interests and US policy changed. By August 1974 the United States had proposed a maximum limit of 200 nautical miles for the economic zone, within which the coastal state would have the jurisdiction and sovereign and exclusive rights for the purposes of exploiting the living and non-living resources.Footnote 44 Indeed, it was already clear by the time that the Convention was concluded that some developed states were likely to benefit more from the concept than developing countries.Footnote 45
Chinese diplomats had some doubts about the EEZ regime during the UNCLOS III as well. Ambassador Ling Ching (Deputy Head of Chinese Delegation in the Second Session and Head of Chinese Delegation in the Fourth Session) explained in his Memoir ‘From Yan’an to the United Nations’ that it was wrong for China to see the EEZ as a regime serving the whole developing world’s interests.Footnote 46 In fact, geographically disadvantaged developing countries, such as Venezuela and Algeria, were against the idea of EEZs.Footnote 47 Moreover, Ling believed that China, as a country bordering semi-closed seas (East China Sea, Yellow Sea, and South China Sea), would be in an awkward situation in relation to the establishment of 200 nautical miles EEZs. Given that the distance between baselines of China and neighbouring countries, such as Japan, is less than 400 nautical miles, it will be difficult for China to rely on the natural prolongation principle for maritime delimitation.Footnote 48 Furthermore, China may have not anticipated that it would one day become the world’s largest distant water fishing countryFootnote 49 and its distant water fishing fleet could cause diplomatic issues due to fishing activities in or near other countries’ EEZs.Footnote 50
China was enthusiastically and wholeheartedly in favour of the principle of common heritage of mankind (CHM) as applied to the deep seabed. On numerous occasions, the Chinese delegation made comments to the effect that the international sea-bed ‘should be used for peaceful purposes. Its resources were owned jointly by the peoples of all countries’.Footnote 51 It was also clear from the Chinese delegation that the International Seabed Authority (ISA) should be established with a Council, General Assembly, and an Enterprise to manage deep seabed mining on behalf of all countries.Footnote 52 The Chinese delegation upheld the CHM principle throughout UNCLOS III. Mr. Liang Yufan from the Chinese delegation made a strong statement in the eleventh session of UNCLOS III:
His delegation stressed that the articles in Part XI were a package which reflected a great deal of compromise, particularly on the part of the developing countries. The principle of the common heritage of mankind and the need for provisions which would benefit everyone could not be changed without undermining the principles and purposes of the convention, thereby destroying the package. His delegation strongly endorsed the position of the Group of 77 and hoped that the United States would adopt a realistic position and co-operate with a view to enabling the Conference to fulfil its task and complete its programme of work.Footnote 53
Even in the UNCLOS III, there is one issue in respect of which China distanced itself from most developing countries: dispute settlement. Although certain developing countries, including Bangladesh,Footnote 54 for example, placed great importance on setting up a compulsory dispute settlement regime under the UNCLOS, China held a different view. As early as the 60th Plenary Meeting in 1976, the Chinese delegation stated that:
The Chinese Government had consistently held that States should settle their disputes through negotiation and consultation on an equal footing and on the basis of mutual respect for sovereignty and territorial integrity. Of course, States were free to choose other peaceful means to settle their disputes. However, if a sovereign State were asked to accept unconditionally the compulsory jurisdiction of an international judicial organ, that would amount to placing that organ above the sovereign State, which was contrary to the principle of State sovereignty. Moreover, problems within the scope of the State sovereignty and exclusive jurisdiction of a sovereign State should be handled in accordance with its laws and regulations. That was why his delegation considered that the provisions in document A/CONF.62/WP.9 concerning the compulsory jurisdiction of the law of the sea tribunal were inappropriate.Footnote 55
This same position was to underpin China’s attitude towards the 2016 The Philippines v. China South China Sea Arbitration; China boycotted it from the very beginning based on the understanding that arbitration cannot be initiated unilaterally without consent of the parties.Footnote 56
In 1978, Deng Xiaoping took power from Mao’s designated successor Hua Guofeng and decided to implement the reform and open-door policy. China turned to embrace the western world, opened its market to foreign corporations and sought to establish a market economy. This domestic power shift was also reflected in the UNCLOS III negotiations. Leading academics of international law, those who used to be marginalized during the Cultural Revolution, such as Wang Tieya,Footnote 57 were invited to join the Chinese delegation. Although China’s position in the negotiations was not fundamentally changed, its tone was softened, and its involvement become more technical as distinct from ideological. For example, in the Eighth Session (1979), the Chinese delegation pointed out that in their view the delimitation of the continental shelf should be based on natural prolongation.Footnote 58 Prior to 1978, China’s position during UNCLOS III generally consisted of ‘broad policy outlines or general principles’ more so than ‘specific regulations’.Footnote 59 This was perhaps the first time that the Chinese delegation sought to express a specific position so as to safeguard China’s own national interest at sea. Accordingly, China become more active in committee meetingsFootnote 60 rather than merely using politicized language in the plenary.
The UNCLOS III (1973–1982) can be seen as the PRC’s debut in a multilateral negotiation at the United Nations. It was a remarkable period of geopolitical shift, when the US and PRC were normalizing their diplomatic relationship to deal with the threat of the Soviet Union. Meanwhile, largely guided by Mao Zedong’s ideology about China as part of the third world, the Chinese delegation firmly aligned itself with the G77 and supported developing countries on most occasions, especially when it came to the establishment of the EEZ and the incorporation of the CHM principle. The UNCLOS III laid solid foundation for China’s engagement with international law of the sea. As discussed in Sections 3 and 4, though China’s national interests at sea changed significantly over the following decades, China mostly chose to work around, rather than openly abandon regimes and principles they had defended and advocated during the UNCLOS III.
3. From the UNCLOS III to the BBNJ
China signed the UNCLOS on the day it was opened for signature on 10 December 1982, and during the 1980s, China Ministry of Foreign Affairs was quite favourably disposed towards the Convention in its finalized form,Footnote 61 although at this time it approached ratification with some caution, seemingly keen to take account of what other countries were doing in this regard.Footnote 62 In the 1980s, most developed countries – the US, the UK, Italy, Japan, West Germany, France, and the Soviet Union, refused to ratify the UNCLOS, due to their dissatisfaction with Part XI. The CHM principle was offered by developing countries as an alternative worldview,Footnote 63 which was at the centre of their quest for a new international economic order. The landlocked and geographically disadvantaged states, which included fifty developing and developed states, were a sufficiently strong group at UNCLOS to ‘prevent rejection’ of the common heritage principle.Footnote 64 However,
[w]hile the developing states could by themselves bring the Convention into force and, indeed, did so by providing the needed number of ratifications, they also understood that, to make the convention’s provisions fully operative, the participation of developed states was needed.Footnote 65
A series of informal consultations, in total 15, took place under the auspices of the UN Secretary-General between 1990 and 1994, which resulted in the Agreement relating to the Implementation of Part XI of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea of 10 December 1982 (the 1994 Agreement).Footnote 66 The 1994 Agreement modified provisions of the Part XI, ‘with no thought of this being an undermining’,Footnote 67 on Enterprise, Transfer of Technology, Economic Assistance, Institutional Decision Making, Production Policy, Financial Terms of Contracts, and Contract Review.Footnote 68 It resulted in ‘none’ of the common heritage elements remaining in the Convention.Footnote 69 According to Anand, the CHM ‘has lost its original meaning and substance when it symbolized the interests, needs, hopes, and aspirations of a large number of developing States and non-self-governing peoples’.Footnote 70
Although China was critical about developed countries’ opposition to the principle of common heritage of mankind, this was not the major concern behind China’s hesitation to ratify the UNCLOS. China had participated actively in informal consultations on the deep seabed regime. ‘While [China] still supported what it regarded as the reasonable demands of developing countries, China was in favor of adjusting out-of-date provisions in Part XI of the LOSC’.Footnote 71 The Chinese Government took the view that the 1994 Agreement settles some difficult issues of the UNCLOS Part XI and strikes a good balance to accommodate national interests among developed and developing countries.Footnote 72 In fact, in 1990, China was one of first countries to submit its application for registration as pioneer investor for deep seabed mining to the Preparatory Commission for the International Sea-Bed Authority and for the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea,Footnote 73 only after France, Japan, India, and the USSR.Footnote 74 The aim of the pioneer investor registration is to ensure China could use new sources of mineral resources for its social and economic development.Footnote 75 As of 2024, China, through the China Ocean Mineral Resources Research and Development Association (COMRA) and Beijing Pioneer Hi-Tech Development Corporation, is one of very few countries currently sponsoring exploration contracts with the ISA of all three types of deep seabed mineral deposits in the Area (polymetallic nodules in the Clarion-Clipperton Fracture Zone, polymetallic sulphides in the Southwest Indian Ridge, the Central Indian Ridge, and the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, and cobalt-rich ferromanganese crusts in the Western Pacific Ocean).Footnote 76
In 1994, Zhao Lihai – the first Chinese Judge of the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS) elaborated the Chinese Government’s concerns over the ratification of the UNCLOS.Footnote 77 These were notably closely aligned with concerns that the Chinese delegation had pointed out during the final session of the UNCLOS III, and pertained to the provisions on innocent passage, definition of the continental shelf, boundary delimitation of the EEZ and continental shelf, and the international seabed regime.Footnote 78 Judge Zhao enumerated five issues. First, Article 17 of the UNCLOS provides a legal basis for innocent passage of foreign war ships through other countries’ territorial sea. This is in contradiction with Article 6 of the 1992 Law of the People’s Republic of China on the Territorial Sea and the Contiguous Zone, which requires foreign war ships to seek approval before entering China’s territorial sea. Zhao suggested that the Chinese Government could make a statement upon ratification of the UNCLOS, based on Article 310, to ensure innocent passage of foreign military vessels must come with prior notification or approval.Footnote 79
Second, China had been insisting on applying the principle of natural prolongation to determine the limit of its continental shelf in the East China Sea, which extends to Okinawa Trough – China-Ryukyu (Liuqiu) Border Trough. Given that the distance between the coastlines of China and Japan is less than 400 nautical miles, it was anticipated that both countries’ claims on the establishment of EEZs would overlap. Furthermore, China and Japan could potentially have two maritime boundaries (EEZ and continental shelf) in the East China Sea, which might cause inconvenience for exerting jurisdiction at sea. According to Zhao, China could take the position that the Okinawa Trough is the single maritime boundary for both continental shelf and EEZ between two countries.Footnote 80
The third concern articulated by Judge Zhao pertained to Article 76 (1) of the UNCLOS, which defines the continental shelf as ‘the seabed and subsoil of the submarine areas that extend beyond its territorial sea throughout the natural prolongation of its land territory to the outer edge of the continental margin…’. China is suspicious of the definition of the continental margin in Article 76 (3), which ‘comprises the submerged prolongation of the land mass of the coastal State, and consists of the seabed and subsoil of the shelf, the slope and the rise’. This concern is also regarding the Okinawa Trough. China believed that the west side of Okinawa Trough is a natural prolongation of the mainland of China, which does not have the shelf, the slope, and the rise. In any case, Zhao quotes Article 76(10) to reassure the Chinese Government that Article 76 does not apply to the ‘question of delimitation of the continental shelf between States with opposite or adjacent coasts’.
Fourth, China was not comfortable with Section 2, Part XV of the UNCLOS regarding compulsory dispute settlement in relation to issues regarding the interpretation and/or application of the Convention.Footnote 81 Zhao believed that the compulsory dispute settlement system of the UNCLOS would not be of great concern to China, since it is a ‘very detailed regime with many limitations and exceptions’Footnote 82 and China would be able to ‘exclude sovereignty disputes, such as maritime delimitation from the compulsory dispute settlement’.Footnote 83 China did make a specific declaration on 25 August 2006 to reaffirm that ‘PRC does not accept any of the procedures provided for in Section 2 of Part XV of the Convention with respect to all the categories of disputes referred to in paragraph 1 (a) (b) and (c) of Article 298 of the Convention’.Footnote 84 Needless to say, the South China Sea Arbitration initiated by the Philippines (2013–2016) was a stress test to China’s position and practice towards compulsory dispute settlement of the UNCLOS.
Last but not the least, although the UNCLOS quickly gathered 159 signatures in the first two years after the adoption,Footnote 85 by 1993, among 60 countries that ratified the UNCLOS, most of those were developing countriesFootnote 86 with limited financial capacity to support the establishment and administration of the ISA, ITLOS, and the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf.Footnote 87 Therefore, China was waiting for developed countries to ratify the Convention so that the financial burden could be properly handled by rich countries.Footnote 88
UNCLOS entered into force on 16 November 1994. China ratified the Convention, including the 1994 Agreement relating to the Implementation of Part XI of the LOSC 18 months later, on 7 June 1996, Footnote 89 about the same time as a group of developed countries – France, Finland, Ireland, Japan, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, South Korea, and Sweden.Footnote 90
Between 1993 and 1995, China participated in all six intergovernmental conferences on the negotiation of the 1995 Fish Stocks Agreement. Although China welcomed the 1995 FSA, the Chinese Government was particularly dissatisfied with paragraph 1(f) of Article 22 regarding the legalized ‘use of force’ by inspecting states, when boarding for inspection of fishing vessels flying the flag of another state in the high seas.Footnote 91 When signing the 1995 FSA, ‘China was very cautious of any possibility that might undermine its sovereignty in international waters’.Footnote 92 China was of the view that any ‘action of force by the inspectors shall only be taken against those crew members or fishermen committing acts of violence and must never be taken against the vessel as a whole or other crew members or fishermen’.Footnote 93
At the time of writing, China has neither ratified the 1995 FSA, nor other instruments such as the FAO 1993 Agreement to promote Compliance with International Conservation and Management Measures by Fishing Vessels on the High Seas (Compliance Agreement) or the FAO 2009 Agreement on Port State Measures to Prevent, Deter and Eliminate Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated Fishing (PSMA). Nevertheless, as a major distant water fishing state,Footnote 94 over the years, China has embraced most important Regional Fisheries Management Organizations/Arrangements (RFMO/As) in the world’s oceans, including, for example, International Commission for the Conservation of Atlantic Tunas (ICCAT), the Western and Central Pacific Fisheries Commission (WCPFC), the South Pacific Regional Fisheries Management Organization (SPRFMO), the Inter-American Tropical Tuna Commission (IATTC), the Indian Ocean Tuna Commission (IOTC), the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR) and the 2018 Agreement to Prevent Unregulated High Seas Fisheries in the Central Arctic Ocean (CAO Agreement).
In general, the UNCLOS served China’s national interests well in the high seas. China had ratified UNCLOS in 1996 and had embraced the international maritime order during the intervening years. China had significantly built up its domestic legal system to implement the UNCLOS,Footnote 95 while increasingly felt constrained by the international law of the sea, including for example, in respect of fisheries in the EEZs of other countries. The enormous growth in China’s economy had meant that by the early twentieth century China boasts significant interests in the world’s oceans beyond national jurisdiction, including, but not limited to shipping, fisheries, marine scientific research, and potentially deep seabed mining.
4. China in the BBNJ Negotiations
China was hesitant when a BBNJ Working Group was established by the UN General Assembly in 2004.Footnote 96 The Chinese Government cautiously welcomed the BBNJ process in 2005, while stressing the importance of existing regimes in the high seas and deep seabed.Footnote 97 China preferred to develop high seas conservation measures that seek a balance between conservation and sustainable use, rather than prohibitions or restrictions on the use of ocean.Footnote 98 Further, G77+China believes that the principle of common heritage of mankind should also apply to marine genetic resources (MGRs) in the high seas, which could potentially generate benefits.Footnote 99 This position was in contradictory with several developed countries, which advocated for a regime facilitating open access.Footnote 100 The G77+China and the EU managed to strike a ‘package deal’ in 2011Footnote 101 to link issues of marine conversation and management with benefit sharing of MGRs.Footnote 102 This breakthrough paved the way for the next step of the BBNJ process – to set up the PrepCom in 2015.
The BBNJ negotiations, especially the PrepCom and IGCs, were convened in a very different geopolitical environment than had been UNCLOS III. President Xi Jinping took office in 2012 and launched his signature foreign policy – Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) during visits to Central Asia and Southeast Asia in 2013.Footnote 103 The BRI aims to build a new world order known as – ‘The Community of Shared Future for Mankind’.Footnote 104 US-China strategic rivalry has intensified ever since. From the South China Sea arbitration (2013–2016)Footnote 105 to President Trump’s ‘Trade War’ in 2018,Footnote 106 US-China relations have been very strained over the past decade.Footnote 107
At the same time, China and Russia have been moving closer. This is evidenced by the fact that President Putin and President Xi, who share similar worldviews, met each other 38 times in person between 2013 and 2022.Footnote 108 In 2019 China and Russia upgraded bilateral relations to a higher level, designated a ‘comprehensive strategic partnership’.Footnote 109 The China-Russia Foreign Ministerial Joint Declaration on Issues of Global Governance was adopted on 23 March 2021,Footnote 110 which reaffirmed the Chinese view of the world order by criticizing the US-anchored ‘rules-based international order’, and placing importance on ‘international law underpinned by the United Nations’. Although officially China is not supportive of Russia’s war in Ukraine, there is no doubt that because of its complete isolation from the West, Russia moved closer to China for security and economic reasons following the Ukraine war since 2022. After consolidating his third term in March 2023, President Xi Jinping chose Russia as the first country for his state visit. The two countries publicized another Joint Statement on Deepening the Comprehensive Strategic Partnership of Coordination for the New EraFootnote 111 on 22 March 2023. The joint declaration reaffirmed that China-Russia bilateral relations are at their ‘best period in history’ and ‘fast growing towards the future’.Footnote 112 It must be pointed out, however, that in 2021, the Russian economy (calculated by GDP) was only 10 per cent of China’s size according to the World Bank.Footnote 113
Unlike the UNCLOS III, amid increasing geopolitical tensions with the US, China refrained itself from using ‘revolutionary’ language to scold the US during the BBNJ negotiations. Moreover, although the Russian delegation was vocal during the BBNJ negotiations, it was rare to see China back up Russian statements and positions directly. On several occasions, the G77+China presented their positions together. This is not only because of the path dependence - China’s alliance with developing countries in the UNCLOS III, but also thanks to one of guiding principles of China’s diplomacy under Xi Jinping – ‘China’s international status as the world’s largest developing country has not changed’ and ‘China always takes developing countries as the foundation of its foreign policy’.Footnote 114 During the negotiation of the first and most controversial theme of the BBNJ – MGRs, including questions on the sharing of benefits, China was enthusiastically supportive of the application of the principle of the common heritage of mankind/humankind, while Russia, on a very rare occasion, stood with the West to call it a ‘concept’.Footnote 115 As we have seen, the principle had ‘fallen out of favour’ by the early 1990s,Footnote 116 but according to De Lucia, it re-emerged in the context of biodiversity.Footnote 117
Free access to MGRs in the high seas was emphasized by a small group of developed countries, including Japan, the EU, and the United States.Footnote 118 They maintained that activities such as bioprospecting in the high seas are subject to the freedom of the seas and supported the idea that oversight and, more crucially, benefit-sharing, are required in relation to the extraction of MGRs.Footnote 119 China made a written submission to the BBNJ Preparatory Committee on 5 December 2016 to ‘reaffirm the view that the principle of common heritage of humankind must underpin the new regime governing marine genetic resources of areas beyond national jurisdiction’.Footnote 120 It also repeatedly expressed support for the principle during BBNJ IGCs. For example, during IGC5.1, the Chinese delegation made a powerful statement that developed countries’ suspicion of sharing monetary benefits with developing countries is not a new argument or a technical concern, rather it is a lack of political will.Footnote 121 The G77+China did ensure that common heritage of humankind (CHH) is listed as one of guiding principles of the final BBNJ Agreement.Footnote 122 Moreover, G77+China managed to establish both non-monetary benefit sharing and monetary benefit sharing mechanism in the final BBNJ Agreement.Footnote 123 Nevertheless, given that the CHH principle is to be interpreted as ‘is set out in the Convention’,Footnote 124 the implementation of the CHH principle by countries is expected to be difficult.
Moreover, China’s interests in the Area had shifted significantly over the past four decades from those of a developing country passively seeking benefits shared by developed countries to those of an industrial power, and potential deep seabed commercial mining state.Footnote 125 ‘China sees that exploration and exploitation of the resources of the Area should be market oriented, and the exploitation shall take place in accordance with sound commercial principles’.Footnote 126 That is perhaps why China reiterated several times that the BBNJ Agreement shall not undermine ‘relevant legal instruments and frameworks and relevant global, regional, subregional and sectoral bodies’,Footnote 127 particularly not interfere with the mandate of bodies such as the FAO, RFMO/As, International Maritime Organization (IMO) and ISA.Footnote 128 Furthermore, during the PrepCom, China was actually in favour of non-monetary rather than monetary benefit sharing,Footnote 129 same as the EU and many other developed countries. It only changed its official position to support monetary benefit sharing in the IGCs.
Therefore, in practice, it will be interesting to see how China implements the CHH principle when it comes to benefit sharing of MGRs. China’s 2016 Deep Seabed Mining Law does not offer any concrete answer. It merely provides that ‘the guiding principles of Chinese activities in the deep seabed are the peaceful use, cooperation, environmental protection, as well as for the “common wellbeing of humankind”’.Footnote 130 This deliberate, vague wording leads some to believe that when it comes to state practice related to CHH principle, China might stay in the middle ground of two camps and adopt a more nuanced approach.Footnote 131 China’s favourable position on common heritage of humankind was even questioned by mainland Chinese scholars. For example, Yang Zewei from Wuhan University bluntly suggested that China’s current position was based on ideology, rather than real interests, and should be abandoned.Footnote 132
Another issue where China stood with developing countries during the BBNJ negotiation is capacity-building and the transfer of marine technology (CBTMT). The UNCLOS devotes the Part XIV to development and transfer of marine technology. Together with CHM principle, Part XIV can be seen as part of an alternative worldview – a new international economic order.Footnote 133 However, Part XIV has not been fully and effectively implemented as yet, partly due to ‘ambiguity in elaborating rights and obligations relating to technology transfer and the absence of a dedicated financial mechanism’.Footnote 134 The developing countries therefore saw the BBNJ negotiation as another opportunity to materialize the obligations of developed countries under the UNCLOS. China to large extent echoed G77’s positions on CBTMT,Footnote 135 including (i) the BBNJ CBTMT provisions shall be based on relevant provisions of Part XIV of the UNCLOS; (ii) it should take full account of the needs and interests of least developed countries, small islands developing countries, landlocked and geographically disadvantaged states; (iii) new international co-operation platform should be created, while existing mechanisms such as the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission (IOC) could be utilized to strengthen international co-operation; and (iv) capacity-building should be meaningful, through approaches such as education, technical training and joint research to improve developing countries’ capacity for conservation and sustainable use of BBNJ.Footnote 136 Nevertheless, when it comes to whether the obligation of CBTMT should be made compulsory – a ‘binary division’ Footnote 137 between developed and developing countries during the BBNJ negotiations,Footnote 138 China prefers voluntary (win-win)Footnote 139 rather than compulsory measures, as do most developed countries. The BBNJ Agreement does strengthen the implementation of the UNCLOS Part XIV in both specificity and scope, through ‘establishing the CBTMT Committee, providing monitoring and review, linking CBTMT to finance, and providing for participation of not only States but also Indigenous Peoples and local communities’.Footnote 140 It somehow avoids to directly address the question of the nature of CBTMT measures. Rather, the BBNJ Agreement emphasizes that countries, ‘within their capabilities’, ‘shall ensure capacity-building for developing States Parties and shall cooperate to achieve the transfer of marine technology’.Footnote 141
During negotiations, there were divergent views on two major issues regarding the ABMTs, including MPAs. The first is the relationship between BBNJ and other relevant instruments. The second is about decision-making method and role of coastal states in the establishment of MPAs.Footnote 142 China has repeatedly expressed the view that the BBNJ Agreement cannot undermine the mandate of other relevant regimes.Footnote 143 Further, China believes that consensus is required for the establishment of ABMT in the high seasFootnote 144 because ABMTs and MPAs would affect freedom of the seas, such as shipping, fishing, and marine scientific research for all countries.Footnote 145 Therefore, a high sea MPA without consensus would become a ‘paper park’ when it comes to law enforcement. This position is nothing new though. China and Russia have been opposing proposals to establish Southern Ocean MPAs in the Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources (CCAMLR)Footnote 146 for more than a decade.Footnote 147 Learning from the CCAMLR experience, a few countries suggested that the decision-making process for establishing high seas MPAs must not be consensus driven. In the end, the BBNJ Agreement reached a compromise by providing that decisions and recommendations in relation to MPAs shall be taken by consensus ‘as a general rule’.Footnote 148 Meanwhile,
If no consensus is reached, decisions and recommendations under this Part shall be taken by a three-quarter majority of the Parties present and voting, before which the Conference of the Parties shall decide, by a two-thirds majority of the Parties present and voting that all efforts to reach consensus have been exhausted.Footnote 149
This is in line with the practice of the UNCLOS. Rule 37 of the Rules of Procedure of the UNCLOS III provides that:
Before a matter of substance is put to the vote, a determination that all efforts at reaching general agreement have been exhausted shall be made by the majority specified in para. 1 of rule 39 (two-thirds majority of the representatives present and voting).Footnote 150
With respect to environmental impact assessment (EIA), discussions and debates were not as ideological driven as issues such as MGRs and CBTMT.Footnote 151 It is where China behaved more like a developed, rather than a developing country, given it is now a major industrialized power at sea. For example, many developing countries would prefer to allow a competent international body, e.g., the Scientific and Technical Body (STB) of the BBNJ to define triggers, standards and approve the report of EIAs as a prerequisite to commercial activities in the high seas. On the contrary, China argues for a state-led approach,Footnote 152 which is like the position of Japan and the United States. Papastavridis well summarized that the divergence between different views on decision-making:
reflects the fundamental dichotomy between mare liberum, ie the default freedom of the individual State to ultimately decide on its activities on the high seas, and the CHM, which dictates that the relevant decisions should only be made through a collective entity.Footnote 153
Eventually, although the BBNJ Agreement ensured the obligation of countries to conduct EIAs for ‘activities that may cause substantial pollution of or significant and harmful changes to the marine environment in areas beyond national jurisdiction’,Footnote 154 it embraced a state-based approach,Footnote 155 where the STB could merely provide comments on the draft EIA report.Footnote 156
In addition to the above matters, China fought hard for excluding disputed sea areas, such as the South China Sea, from the scope of the BBNJ Agreement. This is one of China’s key interests in the BBNJ negotiations,Footnote 157 which covers negotiations across issues of ABMT, decision-making process and dispute settlement. During the IGC 5, the Chinese delegation submitted four written proposals. Regarding the identification of ABMTs, China suggested that a proposal ‘shall not be involved in any kind of land or maritime disputes’.Footnote 158 In case there is a dispute regarding whether or not an area is beyond national jurisdiction, such area shall not be identified as an ABMT.Footnote 159 These suggestions were not directly accepted in the final text of the BBNJ Agreement due to opposition by a few countries led by the EU.Footnote 160 Nevertheless, comparing to other organizations, such as the Council of the European Union (55 per cent of the EU countries, representing 60 per cent of the total EU population vote in favour),Footnote 161 China did manage to push for a high bar for resorting to qualified majority voting to establish a high seas MPA.Footnote 162 China was also very sceptical about applying the UNCLOS dispute settlement mechanism mutandis mutatis to the BBNJ Agreement.Footnote 163 This is because of China’s strong criticism of the South China Sea Arbitration under Annex VII of the UNCLOS.Footnote 164 It is also consistent with China’s position during the UNCLOS III that sovereignty issues cannot be subject to compulsory dispute settlement. China was in favour of building a different dispute settlement mechanism that put state-consent at its heart.Footnote 165 China did not manage to gain enough support for establishing a new dispute settlement mechanism for the BBNJ. However, it did secure the guarantee to prevent jurisdiction over any sovereignty dispute. Article 60(9) of the BBNJ Agreement provides that:
Nothing in this Agreement shall be interpreted as conferring jurisdiction upon a court or tribunal over any dispute that concerns or necessarily involves the concurrent consideration of the legal status of an area as within national jurisdiction, nor over any dispute concerning sovereignty or other rights over continental or insular land territory or a claim thereto of a Party to this Agreement, provided that nothing in this paragraph shall be interpreted as limiting the jurisdiction of a court or tribunal under Part XV, Section 2, of the Convention.Footnote 166
Although it appears to be a yesterday once more scene (North-South cleavageFootnote 167 in the UNCLOS III) from time to time during the BBNJ negotiations, China is clearly different from the same country decades ago. China has been a strong supporter of the CHM principle during both sets of negotiations. It would have been difficult for China to openly abandon the CHM principle, given its firm support for the G77 inclusion of the CHM principle during the UNCLOS III. In this sense, China still behaves and sees itself as part of the Global South, if not a leader of the developing world. However, China’s interests have in many aspects moved towards those of the North, for example, when it prefers to voluntary CBTMT and state-based EIA during the BBNJ negotiations. The shift is inevitable given China’s strong interests in the high seas as the world’s second largest economy with relatively advanced marine technology. Moreover, China actively participated in the BBNJ negotiations to make sure this new regulatory framework for the high seas would not jeopardize China’s own national interests. This is especially the case when it comes to both ABMTs, which might put restrictions of China’s use of high seas resources; and dispute settlement mechanism, which might force China to accept the jurisdiction of an international court or tribunal to deal with sovereignty disputes.
5. Concluding remarks
Chinese diplomacy in the UNCLOS III reflected an exciting era of decolonization – romantic, revolutionary, and ideological. In those days, China was certainly a developing country. China’s main interests at sea were nearshore, rather than in faraway, deep oceans. The Group of 77 played a pivotal role in bringing the People’s Republic of China into the fora of the United Nations. In turn, China wholeheartedly participated in the calls of the G77 for a new international economic order. In contrast, 40 years later, China came to the BBNJ negotiations as a major industrial power. In the middle of a geopolitical tension between the US and China, the Chinese delegation calmly engaged with the BBNJ negotiations without using politicized language. China still sees itself as a developing country, and supported G77’s positions on the incorporation of CHH principle into the BBNJ Agreement. Nevertheless, when it comes to issues such as EIA, China has shifted its positions away from the Global South. Clearly, China aspires to minimize any legal constraint on their activities in the high seas.
What might a rising China bring to the international legal maritime order in the foreseeable future? China’s role in the future of the law of the sea will likely be multi-faceted and more complex, with positions taken on an issue-specific basis. For some observers in the West, the PRC has been increasingly regarded as a serious challenge to the US anchored rules-based international order. However, both China and the United States can be viewed as endeavouring to strongly safeguard their national interests during the BBNJ negotiations. The US remains outside the UNCLOS, while China is determined to stay, with focus on trying to shape the existing system.
Therefore, in a new era, while China is singing ‘Oh Freedom!’Footnote 168 in the high seas, the US could, in contrast, be in favour of a return to ‘Yesterday Once More’,Footnote 169 where the US was the only post-Cold War superpower at sea. Meanwhile, many developing countries may be left to ask: ‘Will you (China) still love me tomorrow?’Footnote 170