It is high time that a general international system was established to determine subsea rights beyond the established 200 mile zone that generally captures the continental shelf.
I think that the 200 mile zone should be modified to include to the edge of the continental shelf for simple practical reasons of management jurisdiction.
Then we have the problem of the intervening sub sea and high seas jurisdiction.  First of, I think it should all be directly managed by the UN as one entity under regulations established independently and ratified by the equivalent of a global vote determined by population.  In that way it is settled however arranged.
The new regime to be administered can establish title for subsea surface blocks and also for specific exploited marine fish stocks.  Some integration will be needed with land based states, but is likely to be in the form of small groups.
The main thing is to separate the creation of title under a rule of law from its administration and to open the door for ownership and compliance.
Otherwise, the present unsatisfactory situation will continue to arise were we afraid to expand national interests.
South Atlantic Map Plots Falklands  Claims
by Staff Writers
Researchers at
The publication of the maps follows the discovery of oil south of theFalkland Islands by a British company, Rockhopper Exploration, and a series of historical arguments about sovereignty and the rights to resources in the South Atlantic .
Argentina and Britain went to war over sovereignty of the Falklands in 1982, and despite the former's surrender, the South American state has maintained its territorial claims to the islands.
In December 2009, Argentina 
The Durham map was compiled using data from a variety of sources, including the submissions of the two states to the United Nations Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf. Specialist mapping software (CARIS LOTS) was used to construct the jurisdictional limits depicted on the map.
The decision by Durham  University 
The Durham 
+ where Argentina 
+ where UK 
+ competing claims
Director of Research at Durham  University 's International Boundaries Research Unit (IBRU), Martin Pratt said: "The map is designed to show the extent of the competing claims between the UK  and Argentina  and highlights the complications that exist in determining the claims for resources in the South Atlantic  and Southern Oceans.
"The islands generate rights over the resources of more than 2.5 million square kilometres of sea and seabed in the South Atlantic Ocean  alone, and both countries have recently defined the areas over which they claim sovereign rights. IBRU's maps highlight the nature of those claims and identify the areas in which the claims overlap.
With the search for oil in this area continuing to intensify, the potential for conflict over the sovereignty of the waters between Argentina  and the UK 
Some oil companies estimate a potential 3.5 billion barrels of oil and nine trillion cubic feet of natural gas exist under the South Atlantic  waiting to be extracted. A study by the British Geological Society suggested that up to 60 billion barrels of oil could lie beneath the seas to the north of the Falklands - a similar-sized deposit to that in the North  Sea .
Martin Pratt said: "The discovery of oil in the North  Falkland  Basin  is likely to exacerbate tensions between the UK  and Argentina  concerning sovereignty over the Falkland Islands, South Georgia and the South Sandwich  Islands .
"Although sovereignty over the islands remains the key issue, determining maritime jurisdiction around the islands - and off disputed territory in Antarctica  - will be a complex and challenging task."
Following British claims on the potentially highly lucrative deep sea oil fields within the islands' 200-mile economic zone, Argentinean officials have revived the country's claims to sovereignty over the Falkland Islands .
In February 2010, British warships were on standby in response to rising tensions in the area over British firms exploring for oil. Argentina 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

















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