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The United States Signs the High Seas Treaty

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2024

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Abstract

Type
Oceans, Environment, and Sciences
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of American Society of International Law

The United States has signed 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 (High Seas Treaty).Footnote 1 Adopted on June 19, 2023, following five years of negotiations, the treaty creates the first international legal framework to address critical issues threatening marine biodiversity in the high seas.Footnote 2 The agreement's main provisions focus on: a process for the equitable sharing of the monetary and non-monetary benefits of marine genetic resources (MGRs); procedures for establishing area-based management tools, including marine protected areas (MPAs); requirements for assessing and mitigating the potential maritime harm of activities through conducting environmental impact assessments; and the creation of mechanisms for capacity-building and the transfer of marine technologies, especially in regard to developing countries, to allow for the full implementation of the treaty's provisions by all parties. Announcing the U.S. signature, Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken said that “[t]he United States stands with the global community in committing to safeguard the health and resilience of our ocean so that it may continue to sustain us for generations to come.”Footnote 3

The ocean is in “a state of emergency as increasing eutrophication, acidification, ocean warming and plastic pollution worsen its health.”Footnote 4 Because two-thirds of the ocean is beyond the national jurisdiction of any country, it is largely without any protection against these threats. The high seas are “governed in a fragmented way,” with disparate treaties regulating fisheries, shipping, and deep-sea mining.Footnote 5 These agreements, and the organizations they have established, “ha[ve] proven inadequate in stemming environmental degradation and loss of biodiversity.”Footnote 6 As a Pew study concluded, “Too often, this piecemeal governance approach leads to the degradation of the environment and its resources, and makes deploying management and conservation tools such as environmental impact assessments and marine protected areas (MPAs), including marine reserves, challenging both legally and logistically.”Footnote 7

Impelled by current and projected harms to marine biodiversity stemming from mineral prospecting, bioprospecting, overfishing, pollution, and climate change, the negotiators of the High Seas Treaty aimed to fill the regulatory void by establishing a legal framework for the dual goals of conservation and sustainable use, adopting techniques designed to do both in four substantive areas. To ensure the “fair and equitable sharing of benefits arising from activities with respect to marine genetic resources [MGRs],” such as from the development of medicines and cosmetics, the agreement establishes processes for the disclosure of information and the distribution of benefits.Footnote 8 The treaty precludes states from making “claim[s] [to] or exercis[ing] sovereignty or sovereign rights” over MGRs.Footnote 9 Instead, the treaty declares that “[a]ctivities . . . [regarding MGRs] are in the interests of all States and for the benefit of all humanity, particularly for the benefit of advancing the scientific knowledge of humanity and promoting the conservation and sustainable use of marine biological diversity, taking into particular consideration the interests and needs of developing States.”Footnote 10 To ensure transparency, the treaty establishes a Clearing-House Mechanism for information pertaining to the collection of MGRs, including plans for the collection of MGRs, the location of any collected MGRs, how the collected MGRs were utilized (including in publications, patents, and products), and, if marketed, information on sales.Footnote 11 Any benefits, monetary and non-monetary (such as samples, scientific data, and marine technology), arising from MGRs are to “be shared in a fair and equitable manner . . . and contribute to the conservation and sustainable use of marine biological diversity.”Footnote 12 Critically, exactly how that will take place was not decided. It will be for the treaty's conference of the parties to “decide on the modalities for the sharing of monetary benefits . . . , taking into account the recommendations of the access and benefit-sharing committee [created by the treaty],” with payments made through a special fund.Footnote 13

To protect certain vulnerable areas of the high seas, the treaty details procedures for establishing “area-based management tools, including marine protected areas,” to “[c]onserve and sustainably use areas requiring protection.”Footnote 14 Detailed provisions elaborate: how MPAs can be proposed by the parties (how the area meets the criteria identified by the treaty, the conservation and sustainable use objectives, and a management plan outlining the measures and monitoring proposed to achieve the objectives); how proposals will be reviewed (through consultations with a broad range of stakeholders, including: bodies of legal instruments and frameworks; global, regional, subregional, and sectoral bodies; Indigenous peoples and local communities with relevant traditional knowledge; and the scientific community, civil society, and other stakeholders); and how decisions on proposals will be taken by the conference of the parties (by a vote if consensus is unattainable).Footnote 15 Parties to the treaty agree to ensure that activities within their jurisdiction or control are conducted consistently with MPAs, and they agree as well to promote measures in other bodies (for example, regional fisheries management organizations) that support MPAs.Footnote 16 The agreement's mechanism for creating MPAs was celebrated as a pathway toward achieving the “30×30” target adopted in December 2022 by the Conference of the Parties to Convention on Biological Diversity to conserve and manage at least 30 percent of “terrestrial and inland water areas, and of marine and coastal areas” by 2030.Footnote 17

To try to prevent future harm to the high seas, parties also agree to assess “the potential impacts on the marine environment of planned activities [such as marine geoengineering and aquaculture] under their jurisdiction or control that take place in areas beyond national jurisdiction” prior to their authorization.Footnote 18 The treaty sets out thresholds and factors for when environmental impact assessments (EIAs) will be conducted and a process for conducting those EIAs.Footnote 19 Public notification and consultation in the EIA process, by states and stakeholders, in an inclusive, transparent, and timely manner, are required, with any comments considered and addressed.Footnote 20 Parties must prepare EIA reports, including specified information.Footnote 21 Draft reports must be shared with the treaty's Scientific and Technical Body (STB) and the STB's comments considered by parties.Footnote 22 Final reports must be published, including through the Clearing-House Mechanism.Footnote 23 Decisions to undertake activities must take “full account . . . of an environmental impact assessment . . . [and will] only be made when, taking into account mitigation or management measures, the Party has determined that it has made all reasonable efforts to ensure that the activity can be conducted in a manner consistent with the prevention of significant adverse impacts on the marine environment.”Footnote 24 Authorized activities must subsequently be monitored, reported on, and reviewed by the party.Footnote 25 The STB may consider the monitoring reports and make recommendations.Footnote 26 It also may consider any concerns raised by other parties, evaluate the concerns raised, and make recommendations to the authorizing party, which must consider them.Footnote 27 More generally, the STB is required to develop standards or guidelines relating to EIAs for adoption by the Conference of the Parties, including, for example, on the “assessment of impacts . . . and how those impacts should be taken into account in the environmental impact assessment process.”Footnote 28

To ensure that parties, particularly developing states, can implement the treaty and participate in its activities, and to “[e]nable inclusive, equitable and effective cooperation and participation in the activities” under the treaty, particularly the three noted above (MGRs; MPAs; and EIAs), the agreement sets out requirements for cooperation in capacity-building and the transfer of marine technology.Footnote 29 Possible types of capacity-building and technology transfer are extensive, and include the “development and strengthening of relevant infrastructure, including equipment and capacity of personnel for its use and maintenance” and the “development and strengthening of institutional capacity and national regulatory frameworks or mechanisms.”Footnote 30 A Capacity-Building and Transfer of Marine Technology Committee will: assess and review the needs required by developing states; “[r]eview[] the support required, provided and mobilized, as well as gaps in meeting the assessed needs”; “[i]dentify[] and mobiliz[e] funds . . . to develop and implement capacity-building and the transfer of marine technology”; measure performance; and make recommendations.Footnote 31 The treaty establishes a financial mechanism to fund capacity-building projects and assist in the implementation of the agreement.Footnote 32

The treaty does not take the place of existing international bodies, such as regional fisheries management organizations (RFMOs) and the International Seabed Authority (ISA); instead, it aims to work with existing organizations and legal frameworks. At its outset, the agreement clarifies that it “shall be interpreted and applied in the context of and in a manner consistent with the [UN] Convention [on the Law of the Sea]” and “in a manner that does not undermine relevant legal instruments and frameworks and relevant global, regional, subregional and sectoral bodies.”Footnote 33 It does, though, create obligations on its parties that are relevant to their membership in those organizations. Thus, for example, parties will be required to use EIAs consistent with the requirements of the High Seas Treaty for deep-sea mining activities authorized by the ISA. Similarly, if an MPA is established that applies to the seabed, any ISA-authorized activities will need to be conducted consistently with the High Seas Treaty. The treaty also may act as a mechanism for the coordination of organizations, such as the International Hydrographic Organization, the International Maritime Organization, and the World Meteorological Organization (in addition to RFMOs), including through consultations to set up MPAs. Throughout the treaty, provisions require the collaboration with, among others, global, regional, subregional, and sectoral bodies. To that end, the agreement stipulates that it should be interpreted to “promote[] coherence and coordination with [the full array of international and regional] instruments, frameworks and bodies.”Footnote 34

The treaty was praised by the United States, particularly its MPA provisions, which align with the 30×30 commitment made by President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. in the first week of his administration.Footnote 35 As negotiations concluded, then-Assistant Secretary of State for Oceans and International Environmental and Scientific Affairs Monica Medina tweeted that “Today the world came together to protect the ocean for the benefit of our children and grandchildren.”Footnote 36 In his statement marking the U.S. signature, Secretary Blinken noted that “[t]he ocean is one global system, and its health is key to the health of our planet. This historic High Seas Treaty creates a coordinated approach to establishing marine protected areas on the high seas, a critical step to conserving ocean biodiversity and reaching the global community's ‘30×30’ target to conserve or protect at least 30 percent of the ocean by 2030.”Footnote 37 The administration has not yet indicated whether it will transmit the treaty to the Senate for its advice and consent to ratification.

References

1 See U.S. Dep't of State Press Release, Signing of the High Seas Treaty (Sept. 21, 2023), at https://www.state.gov/signing-of-the-high-seas-treaty [https://perma.cc/GS46-LKYS] [hereinafter Signing of High Seas Treaty]. The treaty is also known as the BBNJ Agreement (Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction).

2 See 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, UN Doc. A/CONF.232/2023/4 (2023) [hereinafter High Seas Treaty].

3 Signing of High Seas Treaty, supra note 1.

4 United Nations, The Sustainable Development Goals Report 2023: Special Edition 40 (2023), at https://unstats.un.org/sdgs/report/2023/The-Sustainable-Development-Goals-Report-2023.pdf [https://perma.cc/CHN9-GEZW] [hereinafter SDG Report].

5 UN Environment Programme Press Release, Marine Biodiversity Gets a Lifeline with High Seas Treaty (June 20, 2023), at https://www.unep.org/news-and-stories/story/marine-biodiversity-gets-lifeline-high-seas-treaty [https://perma.cc/2JXA-2MTP].

6 Id.

8 High Seas Treaty, supra note 2, Art. 9(a).

9 Id. Art. 11(4).

10 Id. Art. 11(6).

11 See id. Art. 12; see also id. Art. 16.

12 Id. Art. 14(1).

13 Id. Art. 14(7).

14 Id. Art. 17(a)–(b).

15 See id. Arts. 19–23; Annex I.

16 See id. Art. 25.

17 See Decision Adopted by the Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity: Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, Annex, at 9, UN Doc. CBD/COP/DEC/15/4 (Dec. 19, 2022) (Target 3).

18 High Seas Treaty, supra note 2, Art. 28(1).

19 Id. Arts. 30–31.

20 See id. Art. 32.

21 See id. Art. 33(1)–(2).

22 See id. Art. 33(3)–(4).

23 See id. Art. 33(5).

24 Id. Art. 34(2).

25 See id. Arts. 35–36.

26 See id. Art. 37(3).

27 See id. Art. 37(4).

28 Id. Art. 38(1)(c).

29 See id. Art. 40(b).

30 Id. Art. 44(1); see also id., Annex II.

31 Id. Art. 45.

32 See id. Art. 52.

33 Id. Art. 5(1)–(2).

34 Id. Art. 5(2).

35 Exec. Ord. 14,008, Sec. 216, Fed. Reg. 7619, 7627 (Jan. 27, 2021).

36 Monica Medina (@SciDiplomacyUSA), X (Mar. 4, 2023, 10:24 p.m.), at https://twitter.com/SciDiplomacyUSA/status/1632220549974818818.

37 Signing of the High Seas Treaty, supra note 1.