The Open Meeting of the
Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf
1 May 2000, Trusteeship Council,
United Nations Headquaters
"UNCLOS and the delineation of the
continental shelf:
Opportunities and challenges for States"
The highly complex nature of the Guidelines, which deal with geodetic,
geological, geophysical and hydrographic methodologies stipulated in article 76
for the establishment of the outer limits of the continental shelf, using such
criteria as determination of the foot of the continental slope, sediment
thickness and types of sea floor highs, led the Commission to take important
steps to assist coastal States in applying them, among them was the decision to
hold an open meeting, since the Commission generally meets in private (closed)
session owing to the nature of its mandate as a scientific and technical expert
body.
The first day of the seventh session of the Commission, held in New York
from 1 to 5 May 2000, was devoted to an open meeting, aimed at flagging the most
important and challenging issues related to the establishment of the continental
shelf beyond 200 miles, in accordance with the legal and scientific requirements
of article 76 of the Convention. The meeting was also intended to give a general
indication to policy makers and legal advisers of the benefits that a coastal
State might derive from the valuable resources of the extended continental shelf
and to explain to experts in marine sciences involved in the preparation of
submissions how the Commission considered that its Scientific and Technical
Guidelines should be applied in practice.
At the open meeting, the Chairman of the Commission emphasized that the
importance of the resources to be derived from the continental shelf were
enormous and that in future the shelf area would be the main source of world oil
and gas supplies. Offshore oil production in 2000 was estimated at 1.23 billion
tons, and natural gas at 650 billion cubic metres. The effect of the provisions
of the Convention on the continental shelf was that practically all seabed oil
and natural gas resources would fall under the control of coastal States.
Approximately 100 government officials, members of intergovernmental
organizations, legal advisers and experts in marine sciences related to the
establishment of an extended continental shelf attended the meeting. (See
also the Statement of the Chairman of the Commission, )
The programme of the meeting was as follows:
1. |
10:00-10:15 |
Opening
Statement by the Chairman (Yuri Kazmin) [photos
#1, #2, #3)
copyright
©United
Nations] |
2. |
10:15-10:45 |
The United
Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea and delineation of the outer
limits of the continental shelf (Harald Brekke) |
3. |
10:45-11:00 |
Questions and
answers |
4. |
11:00-11:30 |
The mandate
and work of the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf (CLCS)
(Peter Croker) |
5. |
11:30-11:45 |
Questions and
answers |
6. |
11:45-12:15 |
Modus
Operandi of the CLCS (Samuel Betah, speaker, in collaboration with
Andre Chan Chim Yuk) |
7. |
12:15-12:30 |
Questions and
answers |
8. |
12:30-13:00 |
Discussion |
9. |
13:00-15:00 |
Lunch |
10. |
15:00-15:45 |
Scientific
and Technical Guidelines of the Commission on the Limits of the
Continental Shelf (Osvaldo Astiz, K. R. Srinivasan and Mladen
Juracic, speakers, in collaboration with Galo Carrera) |
|
15:00-15:15 |
Chapters 1 to
3 (Astiz and Carrera) |
|
15:15-15:30 |
Chapters 4 to
6 (Srinivasan and Carrera) |
|
15:30-15:45 |
Chapters 7 to
9 (Juracic and Carrera) |
11. |
15:45-16:00 |
Questions and
answers |
12. |
16:00-16:45 |
Geographic
scope and scientific challenges posed by article 76 of the United
Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (Galo Carrera) |
13. |
16:45-17:00 |
Questions and
answers |
14. |
17:00-17:45 |
An outline
for the preparation of a national submission to the Commission on the
Limits of the Continental Shelf (Galo Carrera and Alexandre
Albuquerque) |
15. |
17:45-18:00 |
Questions and answers |
The presentations are contained in a document dated 20 April 2000, entitled
“United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea
and the Delineation of the Continental Shelf: Opportunities and Challenges for
States: Open Meeting of the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf,
Held on 1 May 2000” (14.5 Mb)
More information about the open meeting of the CLCS may be found in
documents CLCS/21 and
CLCS/26.
Note: These documents are
in PDF format and can be read online or printed using the free Adobe®
Acrobat® Reader.
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