Hundreds of offshore extraction platforms dot the world’s oceans, funneling millions of gallons each day of oil, natural gas, and other extracted resources to the surface. While these operations are regulated by the country where they’re located, they have the potential to cause international environmental disasters when located near boundary waters or near large currents. The New York Times looked at the international law implications of the ongoing BP Oil Spill and came to one conclusion: the international law governing oil pollution from offshore platforms is at best thin.
Much of the international law governing oil pollution applies directly to tankers and ships used to transport the oil, which makes sense since these transport vessels constantly cross in and out of territorial waters. But countries are increasingly exploring their offshore resources, leading to the need to create a stronger legal framework for international environmental harms that may be caused by these activities.
To date, a patchwork of international conventions govern oil pollution, most notably:
The latter conventions apply specifically to pollution from moving vessels that traverse international waters. Pollution from fixed offshore platforms like the Deepwater Horizon platform is unlikely to fall under them.
UNCLOS holds the most promise in part because it has been ratified by 156 countries and represents customary international law that applies to non-ratifying countries. For example, the United States has not ratified UNCLOS but considers many of its provisions to be customary, meaning that it generally recognizes the convention provisions.
UNCLOS establishes the general obligation that countries must “take all measures necessary to prevent, reduce, and control pollution of the marine environment from any source” and to “ensure that activities under their jurisdiction or control are conducted so as not to cause damage by pollution to other countries and their environment.” Under UNCLOS, this obligation applies to pollution from “installations and devices used in exploration or exploitation of the natural resources of the seabed and subsoil.”
Article 208 requires countries to “adopt laws and regulations to prevent, reduce and control pollution of the marine environment arising from or in connection with seabed activities.” The laws, regulations, or other measures “shall be no less effective than international rules, standards, and recommended practices and procedures.” UNCLOS also encourages the formation of global and regional rules to prevent this type of pollution. With respect to offshore platform pollution, the strength of UNCLOS is its framework for international cooperation and its attempt to harmonize standards for this pollution.
While this BP oil spill may not infiltrate waters beyond the United States, it reminds us that the next disaster could—and the effects on international waters are not to be overlooked. The gaps in international regulation of marine pollution from fixed platforms will become increasingly evident as more extraction operations are established and as countries and companies look to the Arctic as a source for more resources. Clear legal frameworks and lines of communication between and among countries need to be established
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Yee Huang | June 8, 2010
Hundreds of offshore extraction platforms dot the world’s oceans, funneling millions of gallons each day of oil, natural gas, and other extracted resources to the surface. While these operations are regulated by the country where they’re located, they have the potential to cause international environmental disasters when located near boundary waters or near large currents. The New […]
Rebecca Bratspies | June 7, 2010
Cross-posted from IntLawGrrls Ever since the Deepwater Horizon began gushing oil into the Gulf of Mexico, BP has been dazzling the American people with a series of colorfully named “solutions:” the dome; top hat, junk shot, top kill. However, as the days turned into week, and the weeks turned into months, one thing has become […]
Victor Flatt | June 4, 2010
In the little-followed but hugely important “joint federalism” system through which our environmental laws are implemented, a seismic change may be afoot that could vastly improve environmental compliance and environmental quality in the future. Last week, Al Armendariz, the head of the Environmental Protection Agency’s Region VI, indicated that unless significant changes are made by […]
Ben Somberg | June 3, 2010
ProPublica teamed with the Sarasota Herald-Tribune to put out an important investigative piece on drywall a few days ago — “Tainted Chinese Drywall Concerns Went Unreported for Two Years.” The article, by Joaquin Sapien and Aaron Kessler, reports that: A leading East Coast homebuilder learned four years ago that the Chinese-manufactured drywall it had installed […]
Yee Huang | June 3, 2010
EPA and a coalition of environmental groups recently settled ongoing litigation related to the regulation of concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs). The litigation dates back to 2003, when EPA finally proposed comprehensive regulation of CAFOs, and it centers on what actually constitutes a CAFO. The original Clean Water Act labeled CAFOs as point sources that require a […]
Alyson Flournoy | June 2, 2010
In following the oil spill disaster, it can be hard to think beyond the control effort du jour to the bigger picture. I was riveted by the latest of BP’s seven failed efforts to stop the flow of oil, hoping it would succeed and that the underwater tornado of oil devastating the Gulf, the coast, […]
Daniel Farber | June 1, 2010
Cross-posted from Legal Planet. We’ve known all along that offshore drilling in the Gulf placed at risk exceptionally valuable and sensitive coastal areas. We need look no further than a forty-year-old court decision on Gulf oil drilling, which made the dangers abundantly clear. In 1971, President Nixon announced a new energy plan involving greatly expanded […]
Ben Somberg | May 28, 2010
The Albany Times Union had a nifty, if depressing, scoop over the weekend in “Paterson bottling up mercury ban at plant“: Efforts by the state Department of Environmental Conservation to ban mercury-tainted coal fly ash used by a Ravena cement plant have been bottled up for more than 19 months in a special regulations review […]
Matt Shudtz | May 27, 2010
EPA today announced (pdf) that it will begin a general practice of reviewing – and likely rejecting – confidentiality claims regarding chemical identities and supporting data in health and safety studies submitted to the agency under TSCA. The news is long overdue, but very welcome. One of Congress’s primary goals in drafting TSCA was to create […]