Governance of Offshore Freshwater Resources: Legal Aspects of Sustainable Development, cartea 25
Autor Renée Martin-Nagleen Limba Engleză Hardback – 22 ian 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004421035
ISBN-10: 9004421033
Pagini: 296
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill | Nijhoff
Seria Legal Aspects of Sustainable Development
ISBN-10: 9004421033
Pagini: 296
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill | Nijhoff
Seria Legal Aspects of Sustainable Development
Cuprins
Acknowledgements
Series Editor's Preface
Abstract
1Introduction
1 Purpose of Book
2 Setting the Scene
2.1 Current and Projected Demand for Freshwater
2.2 Offshore Aquifers
2.3 Methane Hydrates
2.4 Economic Considerations
2.5 Shoreline Regime Change
3 Structure
2Legal Principles Governing Seabed Natural Resources
Introduction
1 The Law of the Sea
1.1 Maritime Zones under National Jurisdiction
1.2 Benefit-sharing in the Outer Continental Shelf
1.3 CHM in the ABNJ
1.4 Transboundary Resources
2 Protection of the Marine Environment
2.1 Judicial Action Supporting Environmental Protection
2.2 The Stockholm & Rio Declarations, Agenda 21 and the SDGs
2.3 losc and the Marine Environment
2.4 Regional Seas Programme
2.5 Convention on Biological Diversity
3 Conclusion
3Legal Principles Governing Land-based Freshwater Resources
Introduction
1 Genesis of Limitations on Sovereignty Over Freshwater
1.1 Pre-WWII Development of the Law of Non-navigational Uses
1.2 Lake Lanoux and International Obligations
1.3 The IIL Salzburg Declaration and the ILA Helsinki Rules
2 Early UN Efforts
2.1 The 1977 UN Water Conference in Mar del Plata
2.2 Shared Natural Resources and the UNEP Draft Principles
2.3 UNILC – from Shared Natural Resource to Equitable Utilization
3 Equitable Utilization vs. No Significant Harm: the UN Watercourses Convention and the UNECE Water Convention
3.1 The UN Watercourses Convention and Equitable Utilization
3.2 The UNECE Water Convention and No Significant Harm
3.3 Judicial Balancing
4 Transboundary Aquifers: Shared Natural Resources or Sovereign Property?
4.1 Scholarly Contributions
4.2 The UNILC and the Draft Articles on the Law of Transboundary Aquifers
4.3 UNECE Guidance on Groundwater Governance
4.4 Treaties on Transboundary Aquifers
5 Conclusion
4Legal Principles Governing Offshore Hydrocarbon Development
Introduction
1 Governance Structures for Hydrocarbon Development
1.1 Early Efforts
1.2 Unitization Agreements
1.3 Joint Development Agreements and the Framework Agreement
2 Judicial Guidance on Offshore Hydrocarbon Development
2.1 North Sea Continental Shelf Cases
2.2 Tunisia/Libyan Arab Jamahiriya and Libyan Arab Jamahiriya/Malta
2.3 Arbitral Awards
3 Treaties Addressing Offshore Natural Resources and Minerals
3.1 Netherlands, Germany and the Ems Estuary
3.2 Saudi Arabia, Iran and the Persian Gulf
3.3 France, Spain and the Bay of Biscay
3.4 Saudi Arabia, Sudan and the Red Sea
3.5 Japan, South Korea and the East China Sea
3.6 Malaysia, Thailand and the Gulf of Thailand
3.7 Colombia, Jamaica and the Caribbean Sea
3.8 Senegal, Guinea-Bissau and Cape Roxo in the North Atlantic Ocean
3.9 Oman, Pakistan and the Arabian Sea
3.10 Nigeria, São Tomé and Príncipe and the Gulf of Guinea
3.11 Barbados, Guyana and the Caribbean Sea
3.12 Oman, Yemen and the Arabian Sea
3.13 Seychelles, Mauritius and the Indian Ocean
4 Environmental Impact of Offshore Hydrocarbon Development
5 Conclusion
5Governance of Offshore Freshwater and Emerging Trends
Introduction
1 Governance of Offshore Freshwater under Current Principles
1.1 Governance of Domestic Resources
1.2 Governance of Transboundary Resources
1.3 Some Scenarios
2 Emerging trends
2.1 Right to Water
2.2 Benefit-sharing
2.3 Freshwater as a Global Commons
2.4 Post-sovereign Governance of Freshwater
3 Conclusion
Bibliography
Primary Sources
Cases and Arbitral Decisions
Treaties
Resolutions, Declarations and Documents of International Organizations
Resolutions, Declarations and Documents of the United Nations
Miscellaneous
Secondary Sources
Books and Reports
Journal Articles
Chapters in Edited Books
Edited Books
Newspaper Articles
Online Journals
Webpages
Index
Series Editor's Preface
Abstract
1Introduction
1 Purpose of Book
2 Setting the Scene
2.1 Current and Projected Demand for Freshwater
2.2 Offshore Aquifers
2.3 Methane Hydrates
2.4 Economic Considerations
2.5 Shoreline Regime Change
3 Structure
2Legal Principles Governing Seabed Natural Resources
Introduction
1 The Law of the Sea
1.1 Maritime Zones under National Jurisdiction
1.2 Benefit-sharing in the Outer Continental Shelf
1.3 CHM in the ABNJ
1.4 Transboundary Resources
2 Protection of the Marine Environment
2.1 Judicial Action Supporting Environmental Protection
2.2 The Stockholm & Rio Declarations, Agenda 21 and the SDGs
2.3 losc and the Marine Environment
2.4 Regional Seas Programme
2.5 Convention on Biological Diversity
3 Conclusion
3Legal Principles Governing Land-based Freshwater Resources
Introduction
1 Genesis of Limitations on Sovereignty Over Freshwater
1.1 Pre-WWII Development of the Law of Non-navigational Uses
1.2 Lake Lanoux and International Obligations
1.3 The IIL Salzburg Declaration and the ILA Helsinki Rules
2 Early UN Efforts
2.1 The 1977 UN Water Conference in Mar del Plata
2.2 Shared Natural Resources and the UNEP Draft Principles
2.3 UNILC – from Shared Natural Resource to Equitable Utilization
3 Equitable Utilization vs. No Significant Harm: the UN Watercourses Convention and the UNECE Water Convention
3.1 The UN Watercourses Convention and Equitable Utilization
3.2 The UNECE Water Convention and No Significant Harm
3.3 Judicial Balancing
4 Transboundary Aquifers: Shared Natural Resources or Sovereign Property?
4.1 Scholarly Contributions
4.2 The UNILC and the Draft Articles on the Law of Transboundary Aquifers
4.3 UNECE Guidance on Groundwater Governance
4.4 Treaties on Transboundary Aquifers
5 Conclusion
4Legal Principles Governing Offshore Hydrocarbon Development
Introduction
1 Governance Structures for Hydrocarbon Development
1.1 Early Efforts
1.2 Unitization Agreements
1.3 Joint Development Agreements and the Framework Agreement
2 Judicial Guidance on Offshore Hydrocarbon Development
2.1 North Sea Continental Shelf Cases
2.2 Tunisia/Libyan Arab Jamahiriya and Libyan Arab Jamahiriya/Malta
2.3 Arbitral Awards
3 Treaties Addressing Offshore Natural Resources and Minerals
3.1 Netherlands, Germany and the Ems Estuary
3.2 Saudi Arabia, Iran and the Persian Gulf
3.3 France, Spain and the Bay of Biscay
3.4 Saudi Arabia, Sudan and the Red Sea
3.5 Japan, South Korea and the East China Sea
3.6 Malaysia, Thailand and the Gulf of Thailand
3.7 Colombia, Jamaica and the Caribbean Sea
3.8 Senegal, Guinea-Bissau and Cape Roxo in the North Atlantic Ocean
3.9 Oman, Pakistan and the Arabian Sea
3.10 Nigeria, São Tomé and Príncipe and the Gulf of Guinea
3.11 Barbados, Guyana and the Caribbean Sea
3.12 Oman, Yemen and the Arabian Sea
3.13 Seychelles, Mauritius and the Indian Ocean
4 Environmental Impact of Offshore Hydrocarbon Development
5 Conclusion
5Governance of Offshore Freshwater and Emerging Trends
Introduction
1 Governance of Offshore Freshwater under Current Principles
1.1 Governance of Domestic Resources
1.2 Governance of Transboundary Resources
1.3 Some Scenarios
2 Emerging trends
2.1 Right to Water
2.2 Benefit-sharing
2.3 Freshwater as a Global Commons
2.4 Post-sovereign Governance of Freshwater
3 Conclusion
Bibliography
Primary Sources
Cases and Arbitral Decisions
Treaties
Resolutions, Declarations and Documents of International Organizations
Resolutions, Declarations and Documents of the United Nations
Miscellaneous
Secondary Sources
Books and Reports
Journal Articles
Chapters in Edited Books
Edited Books
Newspaper Articles
Online Journals
Webpages
Index
Notă biografică
Renée Martin-Nagle, Ph.D. (2019), is Visiting Scholar at the Environmental Law Institute and CEO of A Ripple Effect LLC. Her publications on offshore freshwater include the monograph “Transboundary Offshore Aquifers: A Search for a Legal Regime”.
Recenzii
"This comprehensive, well-written book by a world-class expert explores possiblesolutions to the inevitable shortage of land-based freshwater reserves,namely offshore aquifers and offshore methane hydrates....Although this book may be an excellent resource for scholars and researchers,the assumed intention is for this careful analysis to be of guidance topolicy-makers and practitioners towards creating new and meaningful governancestructures. The extensive use of valuable case studies throughout historygives great models to adapt for future discussions. Martin-Nagle has givenhumanity the potential solution to one of the greatest problems worldwide—water scarcity." -Richard K. Paisley and Maya Motyka, Ocean Yeabook 36, Brill | Nijhoff, 2022