Abstract
As Arctic nations look to develop shipping regulations, Canadian statutes — and their intersection with the international law of the sea and the rules adopted by the International Maritime Organization — are instructive for ensuring safety and security in the unique marine polar environment.
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Notes
All have asserted a territorial sea claim adjacent to ‘their’ Antarctic territories, although only Argentina and Chile have claimed an EEZ. D. R. Rothwell (1996) The Polar Regions and the Development of International Law (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), pp. 276–81. Australia briefly adopted authority to enforce its fishing laws in an Antarctic EEZ, but then let the law expire shortly thereafter.
J. Kraska (2011) Maritime Power and Law of the Sea (Oxford: Oxford University Press), p. 294.
See also, S. B. Kaye and D. R. Rothwell (2002) ‘Southern Ocean Boundaries and Maritime Claims: Another Antarctic Challenge for the Law of the Sea?’, Ocean Development and International Law, 33:4–4, 364–5;
and S. Kaye and D. R. Rothwell (1995) ‘Australia’s Antarctic Maritime Claims and Boundaries’, Ocean Development and International Law, 26:3, 195–226.
IMO Doc. MSC/Circ.1056/IMO Doc. MEPC/Circ.399, Guidelines for ships operating in Arctic ice-covered waters, 23 December 2002 and IMO Doc. A.1024(26), Guidelines for Ships Operating in Polar Waters, 2 December 2009, reprinted, International Maritime Organization, IMO Pub. Sales No. E190E, Guidelines for Ships Operating in Polar Waters (2010) (Polar Code). Similarly, for a dispute concerning the term ‘best available scientific evidence’, see A. W. Harris (2005) ‘The Best Scientific Evidence Available: The Whaling Moratorium and Divergent Interpretations of Science’, William & Mary Environmental Law and Policy Review, 29, 375–450.
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Kraska, J. (2016). Canadian Arctic Shipping Regulations and the Law of the Sea. In: Berry, D.A., Bowles, N., Jones, H. (eds) Governing the North American Arctic. St Antony’s Series. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137493910_3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137493910_3
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