At its first
session, in 1949, the Commission selected the regime of the
territorial waters as a topic for codification without, however,
including it in the list of topics to which it gave priority.
At its third session,
in 1951, in pursuance of a recommendation contained in General
Assembly resolution 374 (IV) of 6 December 1949 (E,
F,
S,
R,
C),
the Commission decided to initiate work on the regime of the
territorial waters and appointed Mr. François as Special
Rapporteur for that topic as well.
The Commission
considered this topic at its fourth
and from its sixth to
eighth sessions, in 1952
and from 1954 to 1956, respectively. In connection with its
work on this topic, the Commission had before it the reports
of the Special Rapporteur
[2] and information
provided by Governments.
[3]
At its fourth session, in 1952,
the Special Rapporteur submitted a
report
[4] dealing in particular
with the question of baselines and bays. With regard to the
delimitation of the territorial sea of two adjacent States,
the Commission, at that session, decided to ask Governments
for information concerning their practice and for any observations
they might consider useful. The Commission also decided that
the Special Rapporteur should be free to consult with experts with a view
to elucidating certain technical aspects of the problem. The
group of experts met at The
Hague in April
1953 under the chairmanship of the Special Rapporteur.
[5] In his third report
on the regime of the territorial sea, [6] which was submitted
to the Commission in 1954, the Special Rapporteur
incorporated changes suggested by the experts and also took
into account the comments received from Governments on the delimitation
of the territorial sea between two adjacent States.
At its sixth and seventh
sessions, in 1954 and 1955, the Commission adopted provisional
articles concerning the regime of the territorial sea, with
commentaries, and invited Governments to furnish their observations
on the articles.
At its eighth session, in 1956,
the Commission drew up its final report on the territorial sea,
incorporating a number of changes deriving from the replies
from Governments, which was incorporated by the Commission in
its consolidated draft on the law of the sea.
[7]
At the Commission’s eighth session,
in 1956, all the draft provisions adopted by the Commission
concerning the law of the sea were recast so as to constitute
a single coordinated and systematic body of rules. At the same
session, the Commission adopted a final
draft on the law of the sea, containing seventy-three articles
and commentaries
thereto.
[8] The Commission
noted that, in order to give effect to the project as a whole,
it would be necessary to have recourse to conventional means.
Accordingly, in submitting the final draft to the General Assembly
in 1956, it recommended that the General Assembly should summon
an international conference of plenipotentiaries.
[9]
In accordance with the recommendation of the Commission, the General
Assembly, by resolution 1105 (XI) of 21 February 1957
(E,
F,
S,
R,
C,
A), decided to convene an international conference of plenipotentiaries
“to examine the law of the sea, taking account not only of the
legal but also of the technical, biological, economic and political
aspects of the problem, and to embody the results of its work
in one or more international conventions or such other instruments
as the conference may deem appropriate”.
The United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea met at Geneva from 24 February to 27 April 1958.
Of the eighty-six States represented there, seventy-nine were
Members of the United Nations and seven were members of specialized
agencies though not of the United Nations.
The final report of the Commission on the law of the sea had been referred
to the Conference by the General Assembly as the basis for its
consideration of the various problems involved in the development
and codification of the law of the sea. In addition to this,
the Conference had before it more than thirty preparatory documents,
prepared by the United Nations Secretariat, by certain specialized
agencies and by a number of independent experts invited by the
Secretary-General to submit studies on various specialized topics.
One question which had not been covered in the report of the
Commission, namely, the question of free access to the sea of
land-locked countries, was dealt with in a memorandum submitted
to the Conference by a preliminary conference of land-locked
States which met at Geneva from 10 to 14 February 1958 prior
to the convening of the United Nations Conference. [10]
In view of the wide scope of the work before it, the Conference established
five main committees: First Committee (territorial sea and contiguous
zone); Second Committee (high seas: general regime); Third Committee
(high seas: fishing and conservation of living resources); Fourth
Committee (continental shelf); and Fifth Committee (question
of free access to the sea of land-locked countries). Each committee
submitted to the plenary meeting of the Conference a report
summarizing the results of its work and appending draft articles
as approved. The Conference agreed to embody these draft articles,
some in amended form, in the following four separate conventions:
the Convention on the Territorial Sea and the Contiguous Zone; the Convention on the High Seas; the Convention
on Fishing and Conservation of the Living Resources of the High
Seas; and the Convention on the Continental Shelf. The work
of the Fifth Committee did not result in a separate convention,
but its recommendations were included in article 14 of the Convention
on the Territorial Sea and the Contiguous Zone and in articles 2, 3 and 4 of the Convention
on the High Seas.
[11]
In addition to the four Conventions, the Conference adopted an Optional
Protocol of Signature concerning the Compulsory Settlement of
Disputes, which provides for the compulsory jurisdiction of
the International Court of Justice, or, if the parties so prefer,
for submission of the dispute to arbitration or conciliation.
The texts of the Conventions and Protocol are reproduced in
annex V, section A. The Conference also adopted nine resolutions
on various subjects, including the matter of convening a second
United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea.
[12]
The Final Act of the Conference was signed on 29
April 1958. All the Conventions
remained open for signature until 31 October 1958, by all States
Members of the United Nations or of any of the specialized agencies
and by any other States invited by the General Assembly to become
a party; since that date they have been open to accession by
all such States. The Optional Protocol was open to all States
becoming parties to any of the Conventions. The Conventions
were subject to ratification. The Optional Protocol was subject
to ratification, where necessary, according to the constitutional
requirements of the signatory States. Each of the Conventions
was to come into force on the thirtieth day following the date
of deposit of the twenty-second instrument of ratification or
accession with the Secretary-General of the United Nations.
The Convention
on the High Seas
[13] and the Optional
Protocol of Signature concerning the Compulsory Settlement of
Disputes
[14] came into force
on 30 September 1962.
The Convention
on the Continental Shelf
[15] came into force
on 10 June 1964; the Convention
on the Territorial Sea and the Contiguous Zone
[16] on 10 September 1964; and the Convention
on Fishing and Conservation of the Living Resources of the High
Seas
[17] on 20 March 1966. By 3 October 2003, fifty-one States were parties to the Convention
on the Territorial Sea and the Contiguous Zone, sixty-two States
were parties to the Convention on the High Seas, thirty-seven
States were parties to the Convention on Fishing and Conservation
of the Living Resources of the High Seas, fifty-seven States
were parties to the Convention on the Continental Shelf and
thirty-seven States were parties to the Optional Protocol of
Signature concerning the Compulsory Settlement of Disputes.
On 10 December 1958, the General Assembly, by resolution 1307 (XIII)
(E,
F,
S,
R,
C,
A), asked the Secretary-General to convene a second United Nations Conference
on the Law of the Sea to consider further the questions of the
breadth of the territorial sea and fishery limits, questions
which had been left unsettled by the first Conference on the
Law of the Sea. Eighty-eight States were represented at the
second Conference, which was held in Geneva from 17 March to 26 April 1960.
The Conference failed to adopt any substantive proposal on the
two questions before it. It did, however, approve a resolution
expressing the need for technical assistance in making adjustments
to their coastal and distant-waters fishing in the light of
developments in international law and practice.
[18]
At its twenty-fifth session, the General Assembly, by resolution 2750
C (XXV) of 17 December 1970 (E,
F,
S,
R,
C,
A), decided, inter alia, to convene in 1973 a conference on the law of the sea
which would deal with the establishment of an equitable international
regime — including an international machinery — for the seabed
and the ocean floor and the subsoil thereof beyond the limits
of national jurisdiction. The conference would also deal with
issues concerning the regimes of the high seas, the continental
shelf, the territorial sea (including the question of its breadth
and the question of international straits and contiguous zone),
fishing and conservation of the living resources of the high
seas (including the question of preferential rights of coastal
States), the preservation of the marine environment (including,
inter alia, the prevention of pollution)
and scientific research. The Assembly, by the same resolution,
instructed the Committee on the Peaceful Uses of the Sea-Bed
and the Ocean Floor beyond the Limits of National Jurisdiction
provided for in General Assembly resolution 2467A (XXIII) of
21 December 1968 (E,
F,
S,
R,
C,
A), enlarged to eighty-six members, to act as a preparatory body for
the 1973 conference and to prepare draft treaty articles embodying
the international regime — including an international machinery
— for the area and resources of the seabed and ocean floor,
and the subsoil thereof, beyond the limits of national jurisdiction,
and a comprehensive list of subjects and issues relating to
the law of the sea and draft articles on such subjects and issues.
[19]
The Conference held eleven sessions, from 1973 to 1982. On 10 December 1982, it adopted the United
Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (courtesy of the
Oceans and Law of the Sea web
site),
[20] which includes
320 articles and nine annexes. It also adopted a Final Act to
which are annexed, inter alia, resolutions
and a statement of understanding. The Convention remained open
for signature until 9 December 1984 at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Jamaica and also, from 1 July 1983 until 9 December 1984,
at United Nations Headquarters in New
York. It entered into force on 16 November 1994,
twelve months after the date of deposit of the sixtieth instrument.
As of 3 October 2003,
one hundred forty-three States had deposited instruments of
ratification. It may be noted that a number of articles of the
1982 Convention are based on those of the 1958 Conventions.
In accordance with paragraph 1 of article 311 of the 1982 Convention,
that Convention shall prevail, as between States Parties, over
the Geneva Conventions on the Law of the Sea of 29 April 1958.