On November 16, 1994 C.E., one of the most ambitious legal documents in human history quietly crossed a threshold that reshaped how every nation on Earth relates to the sea. The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea — UNCLOS — formally entered into force, one year after Guyana became the 60th nation to ratify it. For the first time, a single comprehensive framework governed everything from fishing rights and shipping lanes to deep-sea mining and the protection of marine ecosystems.
Key facts
- Law of the Sea treaty: UNCLOS entered into force on November 16, 1994 C.E., replacing a patchwork of older agreements dating back to 1958 C.E. and, before that, a 17th-century principle known as mare liberum — the freedom of the seas.
- Exclusive economic zones: The convention established a 200-nautical-mile EEZ for each coastal nation, giving states sovereign rights over the natural resources — fish, oil, minerals — in the waters off their shores.
- International Seabed Authority: UNCLOS created a new intergovernmental body to regulate deep-sea mining beyond national jurisdiction, grounding it in the principle that the ocean floor’s resources are the “common heritage of mankind.”
Why the world needed a new ocean law
For centuries, the dominant legal idea governing the seas was simple: the ocean belonged to no one. Ships could sail freely. Nations could claim a narrow strip of coastal water — typically three nautical miles, roughly the range of a cannonball — but beyond that, the sea was open to all.
That framework began straining under pressure in the early 20th century. Nations discovered undersea oil and mineral deposits. Industrial fishing fleets ranged further and depleted stocks. Pollution crossed borders with the tides. By the mid-20th century, countries were claiming coastal zones of 12 and even 200 nautical miles, often unilaterally and in conflict with their neighbors.
The United Nations made two attempts to negotiate a comprehensive framework — in 1958 C.E. and 1960 C.E. — but both fell short. The first produced four narrower treaties. The second produced nothing at all. Developing nations, in particular, had little meaningful voice in either conference.
A decade of negotiation built on consensus
The third attempt was different in design. When negotiations opened in New York in 1973 C.E., organizers made a deliberate choice to use a consensus process rather than majority voting. With more than 160 nations at the table — many of them newly independent states from Africa, Asia, and the Pacific — that decision mattered enormously. It meant no bloc could simply outvote the rest of the world.
The negotiations ran for nearly a decade. When the final text opened for signature in Montego Bay, Jamaica in 1982 C.E., it carried a particular symbolism: a treaty governing the sea, signed in a small Caribbean island nation, shaped in part by the voices of countries whose coastlines had long been extracted from rather than consulted.
Arvid Pardo of Malta had first raised the issue at the United Nations in 1967 C.E., proposing that the deep seabed — and its mineral wealth — should be treated as a shared inheritance of all humanity, not a resource available only to the nations with the technology to reach it. That idea became the moral and legal foundation of Part XI of the convention, which established the International Seabed Authority.
What UNCLOS actually does
The convention divides ocean space into a series of legally distinct zones. Territorial seas extend 12 nautical miles from a nation’s baseline. Contiguous zones reach 24 nautical miles. Exclusive economic zones — the provision that most directly affects fishing, energy, and resource rights — extend 200 nautical miles. Beyond those zones lie the high seas, open to all nations, and the deep seabed, governed by the ISA.
It also established the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea, based in Hamburg, Germany, to resolve disputes between states. Landlocked nations were guaranteed the right to access the sea without paying transit taxes. Scientific research on the high seas was protected as a freedom.
By 2024 C.E., 169 sovereign states and the European Union had become parties to the convention — one of the broadest ratification records of any international treaty in history.
Lasting impact
UNCLOS didn’t just set lines on a map. It shifted the fundamental legal relationship between nations and the ocean. Before it, disputes over fishing grounds or shipping lanes often had no clear legal forum and no settled rules. After it, there was a shared framework — imperfect, incomplete, but real.
The convention’s influence extended well beyond its formal provisions. It created the vocabulary and the institutional architecture for subsequent ocean governance agreements. In 2023 C.E., after years of negotiation, countries reached agreement on a High Seas Treaty — formally an instrument of UNCLOS — that would establish marine protected areas and environmental impact requirements in international waters, the vast ocean spaces beyond national jurisdiction that cover nearly half the planet’s surface.
The principle that deep-sea resources are the common heritage of humanity, not a prize for the technologically advanced, remains one of the most radical ideas ever embedded in international law. Whether it holds in practice — as deep-sea mining interest intensifies — is a live question. But it was written into the framework. That matters.
UNCLOS also gave legal teeth to the concept of protecting the marine environment, connecting ocean governance to what would later become Sustainable Development Goal 14: the conservation and sustainable use of oceans and their resources.
Blindspots and limits
The United States — one of the world’s largest maritime powers and a major user of the sea lanes UNCLOS protects — has never ratified the treaty, citing concerns about the deep-sea mining provisions, even after a 1994 C.E. amendment was negotiated specifically to address those objections. That absence creates a real gap in the framework’s universality. The convention also does not resolve territorial disputes or sovereignty questions, which means some of the world’s most contentious maritime conflicts — including competing claims in the South China Sea — continue to generate tension outside UNCLOS’s ability to fully adjudicate them.
Read more
For more on this story, see: United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea — Wikipedia
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Ghana establishes a marine protected area at Cape Three Points
- Indigenous land rights recognized for 160 million hectares at COP30
- The Good News for Humankind archive on international law
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