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Who Governs the High Seas?

Creating, coordinating, and implementing international ocean policy is a complex and time-consuming endeavor.

August 10, 2017 โ€” The earthโ€™s surface is more than 70% ocean, more water than land, a mass of blue connecting disconnected green. Nation states claim up to 200 miles from their coasts as areas of โ€œnational jurisdictionโ€ over which they have the power to exploit, consume, and regulate. But the vast majority of the ocean lies outside those boundariesโ€”the high seasโ€”an enormous reservoir of biodiversity that presents a very difficult challenge for governance and enforcement, for protection and sustainability.

In 1967 international diplomats, representing some 160 countries, began discussions and negotiations for what became in 1973 the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) that, in 1994, was ratified as a means โ€œto define the rights and responsibilities of nations with respect to their use of the worldโ€™s ocean, establishing guidelines for businesses, the environment, and the management of marine natural resources.โ€

Since the ratification of the Law of the Sea, international experts have been considering and debating how to create a binding instrument to address the changing accessibility of marine areas outside national jurisdiction and the new technologies, increased scientific knowledge, and expanding resource demands that impact them.

Read the full story at HuffPost

Hillary Clinton Reveals Her Ocean Policies

August 30, 2016 โ€” In response to a letter sent by 115 ocean leaders to the leading presidential candidates, Secretary Clinton has released a two-page response on what she will do to protect our coast and ocean. With just over two months until the election this marks the first time in the campaign where a candidate has fully addressed the daunting issues confronting Americaโ€™s public seas.

In her letter on August 27 she lays out a range of solutions she says she will act on if elected including growing the โ€œBlue Economy,โ€ supporting coastal adaptation to climate change, ending international pirate fishing, expanding sustainable and transparent U.S. fishing and seafood practices and ratifying the Law of the Seas Convention that has been held up by the U.S. Senate for over 20 years.

Read the full story and letter at Blue Frontier

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