Did you get a little bit bigger over the holiday
season? Well, so did America. You may not have noticed in the pre-Christmas
rush, but on December 19, 2023, the U.S. added an area of about 1 million km2
(roughly 386,000 square miles). That’s about the size of one Egypt or slightly
more than two Californias.
How did you not notice? Well, perhaps because no shots were
fired, no flags were raised, and no actual land was gained. The newest bits of
America are all maritime, way out on the high seas. (The more appropriate unit
of measurement should therefore be 292,000 square nautical miles.)
Biggest enlargement since the Alaska Purchase
America’s most significant enlargement since the 1867
Alaska Purchase was reported by the U.S. State Department in a terse communiqué, saying it had defined “the outer
limits of the U.S. continental shelf in areas beyond 200 nautical miles from
the coast, known as the extended continental shelf (ECS),” which the department
noted is an “extension of a country’s land territory under the sea.”
“Like other countries, the United States has exclusive
rights to conserve and manage the living and non-living resources of its ECS,”
the State Department said. “The United States also has jurisdiction over marine
scientific research relating to the ECS, as well as other authorities provided
for under customary international law, as reflected in the 1982 UN Convention
on the Law of the Sea.”
The 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS for
short) gives coastal states the right to claim an Exclusive Economic Zone (or
EEZ) that extends 200 nautical miles from their shoreline. It also allows them
to include the ECS: The areas where the continental shelf — the gently sloping
underwater extension of a land mass before it drops off to the ocean’s depths —
extends beyond those 200 nautical miles.
To date, more than 90 other countries have already claimed their ECS.
- An EEZ should not be confused with territorial waters, which typically end 12
nautical miles out from the shoreline. This is where coastal states have
full sovereignty.
- In contrast, countries only have economic
jurisdiction over their EEZs. That’s
not to be sneezed at: They have the sole right to exploit that zone’s
natural resources (fish, oil, minerals, etc.) and to deploy other economic
activities (such as wind and tidal power generation) within it.
- An ECS is
different still. Rights pertain only to the seabed and the subsoil, not to
the water column (including the fish), as is the case in an EEZ.
Although not a signatory to the convention itself, the U.S.
recognizes UNCLOS as the basis for international maritime law and in 1983
declared its own 200-mile EEZ. America’s EEZ was the largest in the world. At
3.4 million square nautical miles (11.6 million km2),
it is bigger than the land area of all 50 states combined.
Know thy shelf
The ECS adds another 30% to the waters that are under some
degree of U.S. jurisdiction. The addition was made possible by a 20-year
data-collecting project conducted by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA) and the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS). The project to
determine the size of the ECS involved 40 mapping expeditions costing tens of
millions of dollars, making it America’s largest offshore mapping effort ever.
So, where exactly did the U.S. get bigger? The ECS is not
one contiguous zone but consists of seven distinct maritime areas.
- Of these, the Arctic ECS,
a wedge-shaped slice of the Arctic Ocean north of Alaska, is by far the
largest: it comprises 520,400 km2 (151,725
sq nmi), or 52.7% of the total. That’s half an Egypt or one California.
- The Atlantic ECS (239,100
km2, or 69,710 sq nmi) is 24.2% of the total. This
slim-waisted band of ocean stretching from the Bahamas to Canada is
slightly larger than Romania and slightly smaller than Michigan.
- Plugging a hole in the U.S.-Russia maritime
border, the Bering ECS (176,300 km2, or 51,400 sq nmi) is the third-largest
addition (17.8% of the total), about the same size as Uruguay or Missouri.
- The Pacific ECS,
a bulge off the coast of northern California, is the biggest of the
smaller additions (3.3% of the total). Covering 32,500 km2 (9,475 sq nmi), it’s slightly larger than
Belgium and about the same size as Maryland.
- Two neighboring patches in the Gulf of Mexico add up to 1.9% of America’s
ECS: a larger zone in the east (11,800 km2, 3,440
sq nmi) and a smaller one in the west (6,300 km2, 1,840 sq nmi), together roughly equal in size
to Kuwait or Connecticut.
- That leaves the Mariana ECS,
a small triangle of no more than 1,300 km2 (380
sq nmi), or 0.1% of the total. That’s about the size of Hong Kong, or
one-third of Rhode Island.
· Of those seven, the most
important chunk is the Arctic one — not just size-wise but also in terms of its
resource potential. It’s also a strategic position for the U.S., considering
this area will likely grow more important for global shipping as global temperatures
rise.
· Claims, counterclaims, conflict?
· However, unilaterally extending
claims on real estate, even of the aquatic kind, may invite counterclaims.
While previous agreements with Russia, Mexico, and Cuba exclude the risk of
overlap, America’s ECS does intrude on analogous claims by Canada, Japan, and
the Bahamas.
BIG THINK
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