Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Concern over 'high seas security loophole'


 Global ship traffic seen from space (FleetMon satellite AIS)
All passenger ships and merchant vessels above gross 300t must now carry and use the Automatic Identification System (AIS). It is a powerful tool.
AIS broadcasts not just position, course, and speed, but also information about a ship's type, draught, cargo - even its captain.
Originally intended as a near-shore safety system, new satellite-borne receivers capable of picking up the signals mean AIS now operates across the globe.
But AIS has its limitations.
In the densest traffic lanes, it can be difficult from orbit to distinguish individual ships, and this will be even more challenging if all vessels are mandated to carry the system.
Also, in an ideal world, AIS needs to be used alongside other technologies.
Criminals will be tempted, for example, to disable their ship's AIS and conduct their activities in weather that impedes air reconnaissance.
But if an AIS receiver is mounted on a satellite that also has radar, it will be possible to detect this ship through cloudy skies, day or night. 
The ship's owners will then have to explain why their AIS is not switched on.

From BBC

All vessels using international waters should be identifiable and be part of a global tracking system to close a "security loophole" on the high seas.

The call was made by the Global Ocean Commission, an "independent high-level initiative on the future of the ocean".
The commission said current technology made the idea feasible and affordable.

At present, only passenger and large merchant vessels are legally required to have unique ID numbers and tracking devices.

Previous studies have highlighted a link between the lack of unique identification and tracking technology and criminal activity, such as people trafficking, illegal fishing and terrorism.
Officials investigating the 2008 Mumbai attacks in India, which left more than 160 people dead and injured hundreds more, said the attackers used a private fishing trawler to reach the Indian city after they overpowered the vessels' crew.
"In the 21st Century, when governments are doing so much to make their borders and citizens secure, it seems extraordinary that they have left a loophole big enough to sail a trawler full of explosives through," commented Jose Maria Figueres, one of the commissioners and former Costa Rican President.
"There are details to be worked though, such as the cost of tracking systems, although from the evidence we have heard so far we do not think that will be an obstacle."
He added: "For the security of citizens around the world, it seems clear that it is time to close the loophole."

Vessels can use a number of electronic systems for identification and communication, one of which is known as the Automatic Identification System (AIS).
AIS is a short-range system, using VHF radio.
However, satellites in low-Earth orbit can also detect AIS signals, which provides real-time global coverage.

 ExactEarth satellite AIS

'Good guys' rewards

The commissioners said that many governments were taking steps to address the issue in their own waters but - they added - there had been very little progress to tackle the problem in waters outside of national jurisdiction.

 Localisation of vessels and small-sized boats with Pleiades-1A (Astrium ship detection & tracking)

Another commissioner and former UK Foreign Secretary David Miliband observed that legally requiring ID and real-time tracking of vessels using the high seas would also deliver other benefits, such as cracking down on human trafficking and illegal fishing opportunities.
"Mandatory vessel ID and tracking would reward those who play by the rules and penalise those who do not," Mr Miliband said.
"It would create economic opportunities for the 'good guys' and improve the social conditions of seafarers."

Writing in the journal Science in 2010, a study suggested that up to 26m tonnes of fish, worth an estimated $23bn (£16bn), were landed illegally each year.
The commission issued its recommendations for vessel monitoring at the end of a two-day meeting in New York and is expected to publish its final report in mid-2014.

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Monday, July 8, 2013

Five thousand metres under the sea: my journey to another world

 The deep submergence vehicle SHINKAI 6500 was scheduled to dive 5,000-meter deep in the ocean for a purely scientific research purpose.
The scientific exploration was fully broadcast live on the Internet.

From TheGuardian

Marine ecologist Jon Copley describes the first manned mission to the Earth's deepest known hydrothermal vents

Five kilometres, or 3.1 miles, is not a great distance on land – the length of a pleasant stroll.
But five kilometres vertically in the ocean separates different worlds.
On 21 June I had the opportunity to make that short journey to another world, by joining Japanese colleagues for the first manned mission to the deepest known hydrothermal vents, five thousand metres down on the ocean floor.

Cayman Trough (also known as the Cayman Trench, Bartlett Deep and Bartlett Trough)

>>> geolocalization with the Marine GeoGarage <<<<

The goal of the expedition, led by Prof Ken Takai of the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, was to study the limits of life at deep-sea vents in the Cayman Trough as part of a round-the-world voyage of discovery by the research ship RV Yokosuka.
In February, I had led a British expedition investigating the same vents with a remotely operated vehicle, so I was delighted to join the team actually visiting them inside one of the few machines that can carry people beyond five kilometres deep.

Crammed into the two-metre chamber of the Shinkai6500 with pilot Yoshitaka Sasaki and co-pilot Yudai Tayama, we waited for the team on the deck of the RV Yokosuka to hook us up to the stern gantry and lift us out over the rolling blue waters of the Caribbean.
We fanned ourselves as the temperature inside our hollow metal ball rose past 30C in the tropical morning sun.
At 09.07 we were lowered gently into the water, detached from the ship, and sank beneath the grip of the waves on our journey into the void below.

Five minutes after leaving the surface, we passed 200 metres depth and entered the "twilight zone", where sunlight is already too dim for microscopic algae to thrive.
Our portholes became discs of the deepest blue imaginable – a colour eloquently described as "luminous black" by deep-sea pioneer William Beebe, after whom we named the undersea vents below.
Beebe and his colleague Otis Barton were the first people to venture into the deep ocean and see its life first-hand, when they dived in their bathysphere in the early 1930s.

At 09.29 we passed 923 metres deep – the maximum depth reached by Beebe and Barton in 1934. Moments later we entered the "midnight zone" beyond 1,000 metres deep, where not even the faintest traces of sunlight remain.
With our sub spinning slowly during descent, and an outside water temperature of 5.3C now thankfully cooling us, we were passing through one of the least-known realms of our planet: the huge interior volume of the ocean.

The name of this voyage, “QUELLE”, is an acronym for “Quest for the Limit of Life”.

This is a water world without walls, inhabited by creatures of ethereal beauty.
From the vantage point of my 10-centimetre porthole, I glimpsed life forms with outlines like blown glass occasionally drifting past our lights, while small crustaceans hovered around like flies, keeping pace with our descent.
All are part of the ecology that transfers carbon from surface waters to the depths below, via the perpetual rain of particles processed by those that live here.

At 09.56 we reached 2,200 metres depth – a personal milestone, as that was the deepest I had been before, but this time not even halfway to the bottom.
Forty minutes later we passed the average depth of the oceans, at around 3,800 metres.
Finally, after free-falling through the water for two hours, we approached the seafloor at a depth of 5,099 metres, stirring up a temporary cloud of silt as we touched down.

As the silt cleared, we found ourselves on a flat plain of yellow-tinged mud, inscribed with pits, burrows and tracks by species that eke out their existence on the detritus that settles from above.
To reach the Beebe Vent Field some 400 metres away, we crept across a landscape of alien contours, shaped by processes different from those that sculpt the land.

 The deepest known vent, at nearly 5 kilometers (3 miles) beneath the ocean surface.
Credit : NERC/NOC

Within a few minutes, the pool of light in front of our submersible revealed a slope of grey lava rubble, which eventually gave way to jumbled blocks of rust-coloured sulfides – the minerals formed by the deep-sea vents.
Soon afterwards, we arrived at our target site: a set of "black-smoker chimneys" at a depth of 4,967 metres.

These slender mineral spires, two storeys high, are pipes from which fluids hotter than 400C gush into the ocean.
The hot fluids are quenched by the chilly waters of the deep sea, and form a billowing plume of smoke-like particles that we can detect nearly a kilometre above.
Sitting next to this force of nature in the Shinkai6500, surrounded by vast darkness and a pressure greater than half a tonne per square centimetre, was simultaneously humbling and wonderful.

 Anemones and blind shrimp found near the vents.
Credit : NERC/NOC

Through dexterous operation of the Shinkai6500's mechanical arms by pilot Sasaki-san, we quickly began collecting samples of rocks, the hot fluids from the vents, and the creatures thriving around them: speckled anemones with almost-translucent tentacles, and the orange-tinted shrimp scurrying among them.

At five kilometres deep, our time on the seafloor was limited to three-and-a-half hours, which we burned through attempting to complete our scientific "to do" list.
All too soon, the visit to the vents was over, and we began our return to the world above.
But the deep ocean had one more gift to give. With the lights switched off during ascent, I could press my face against the porthole to see the bioluminescent displays of deep-sea animals: flashes and squirts of light in the smothering darkness, triggered by the passing of our submersible.
This spectacle is usually invisible to the cameras of remotely operated vehicles, which lack the sensitivity of a dark-adapted human eye.

 Jon Copley using skype to show his class discoveries from the deep (see blog)

At a depth of 426 metres, I could also see faint light reflecting from a white plastic tray at the front of the submersible – the first detectable photons from the sunlit world above, heralding our imminent return.
Thanks to the thick walls of the submersible's sphere, we had no need to decompress during our ascent, because we had remained at surface pressure throughout the dive.

By 17.32 the Shinkai6500 was secure again on the deck of RV Yokosuka, where our colleagues were waiting to rush our payload to the ship's laboratories.
We hope those samples will help in projects to understand the limits of life in the ocean, and reveal more about how our planet works.
Our previous visits to these vents with remotely operated vehicles have already yielded a menagerie of new deep-sea species.

For those of us inside the sub, the opening of the hatch signaled a welcome chance to uncurl our limbs after eight hours, feel the touch of sunshine on our skin again, and answer nature's call.

The deepest point that we reached on the dive was 5,114 metres, when we travelled across the seafloor from our landing site to the vents.
Although few people have reached depths of five kilometres, that is still less than halfway to the deepest spot, the 11-kilometre Challenger Deep of the Marianas Trench.
But last year, Hollywood director and ocean explorer James Cameron visited that furthest point, more than fifty years after Jacques Piccard and Don Walsh first reached it.

After millennia of crossing the oceans in ignorance of what lies beneath, there is no longer any part of the abyss beyond our reach if we can find the will to go there.
And the deep ocean is no longer out of sight or out of mind: the day after our first dive, Prof Ken Takai broadcast live from the Shinkai6500 at the vents to an online audience of more than three hundred thousand people, who made more than half a million comments during the event.

The motives that spur our further journeys into the deep ocean will define its future.
We can go there to learn from it, or to exploit its natural resources for our rapidly expanding population.
Or perhaps for once we might achieve a balance between the two.
The challenge of the deep ocean is no longer technological; now it is a test of whether our wisdom can match our ingenuity.

Links :

Sunday, July 7, 2013

Halcyon



This is a promotional film showing the fantastic 1929 Classic yacht HALCYON.
She is operating as a charter yacht around the UK and gives the opportunity to taste the luxury lifestyle.

Saturday, July 6, 2013

VTS system for busy Gulf of Finland waters

Accident prevention is important for both environmental protection and maritime safety and to improve the flow and Maritime Traffic Risks in the Gulf of Finland.
The new ENSI-system (Enhanced Navigation Support Information) due to the ships of the sea route plans for traffic control in use, and the vessels to information in electronic form.
This will improve maritime safety and the risks of oil spills by observing the decrease.

ENSI at a glance
which enables improved forecasting vessel traffic control, and provides better access to information on weather and ice conditions and any exceptional circumstances affecting a tanker’s route.

Friday, July 5, 2013

The Law of the Seas and the Spratly Islands dispute

>>> geolocalization with the Marine GeoGarage <<<

From Jurist

Edsel Tupaz of Tupaz & Associates says that the dispute over the Spratly Islands highlights several areas of the international law of the seas and complex issues of multilateral diplomacy that must be dealt with in order to resolve the dispute... 

Last week, Congressman Eni Faleomavaega of American Samoa introduced House Resolution 352, which calls for "a peaceful and collaborative resolution to maritime territorial disputes in the South China Sea and other maritime areas adjacent to the East Asian mainland."
On July 8, rallies led by Filipino-Americans were held before key Chinese consulates across the US to protest Beijing's military actions in the Spratly Islands, which the Philippines considers to be its territory under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS)

Spratly Islands military settlements
picture : Spiridon Manoliu

The July 8 rallies followed the recent Senate Resolution 217, which unanimously "deplores" China's use of force in South China Sea.
The resolution itemized key flash points relating to disputed maritime territories of the South China Sea.
It listed instances of what the Senate deemed unlawful or illegitimate use of force by the Chinese, and affirmed the US government's commitment to multilateral processes, even as it recognizes that the US is "not a party to these disputes."
Just a few days preceding the resolution, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Philippine Foreign Minister Albert Del Rosario held a joint press conference affirming the 1951 US-Philippines Mutual Defense Treaty.
Clinton announced that the US "stands ready to support its ally, the Philippines," amidst escalating tensions over the Spratlys, and proposed a "rules-based regime" under the parameters of UNCLOS.
Clinton added that the US government was keen in "finding ways of providing affordable material and equipment that will assist the Philippine military to take the steps necessary to defend itself.

>>> geolocalization with the Marine GeoGarage <<<

Following this, the US Navy, jointly with its Philippine counterpart, held a send-off in San Francisco of the BRP Gregorio del Pilar, a 378-foot Hamilton-class cutter, a frigate-class "surface combatant warship" intended to replace the BRP Rajah Humabon, the flagship of the Philippine navy now being decommissioned, which was a US-built World War II Cannon-class destroyer.
According to reports, the Gregorio del Pilar was acquired specifically to patrol the Spratly areas closest to Palawan, a major province of the Philippines, as well as to provide maritime security for ongoing Philippine oil and gas exploration and extraction activities.

The foregoing events constitute the US response to the escalating tensions between China, the Philippines and Vietnam over the Spratlys.
The Spratly Islands have long been a source of conflict between Brunei, China, Malaysia, the Philippines, Taiwan and Vietnam.
These islands lie at the heart of one of the world's busiest sea lanes and are known to hold rich oil and natural gas reserves.
Time and again, the Chinese government has insisted that the Spratly dispute should be resolved through bilateral negotiations, while the US and the Philippines, along with the rest of the claimants, call for a multilateral approach.

Either approach will undoubtedly implicate a rules-based regime.
So far there are at least three core international legal codes at play: UNCLOS, the 2002 Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea between China and ASEAN, and the 1951 US-Philippines Mutual Defense Treaty.
Needless to say, these particular corpuses of law will be operating under a broader set of underlying rules and norms of international law restated in the Geneva Conventions and their precursors, the entire UN system itself, as well as the relevant decisions of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) sitting at The Hague.

Even for China there are many legal avenues.
However, the Chinese government's carte blanche declaration that the "South China Sea" belongs to China, without regard to the penumbra of sea-use rights under UNCLOS, is not one of these avenues.
The ways in which one might be able to field a sufficient territorial claim under UNCLOS requires a proffering of technical extrinsic evidence, one will need maritime experts and professionals accustomed to scientific fact finding, all in turn outcome determinative of applicable legal norms.
The salient dispute settlement provisions of UNCLOS are one thing, and marshalling the evidence, quite another.

The great thing about UNCLOS is that it contains everything you need to know about the law of the seas, that is, both substantive law and procedure.
UNCLOS is not clear in this case either, however.
As to the grievance procedure, Article 287 of UNCLOS defines the very courts or tribunals available for dispute resolution to include the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea, the ICJ, an arbitral tribunal constituted under UNCLOS, or a special arbitral tribunal.
No doubt international lawyers and policy experts will have more than a few words to say about the Spratlys if China were to accede to the compulsory jurisdiction of the UNCLOS courts.
What follows is the attempt to lay out the basic legal and policy norms, restated in the vernacular for laymen and lawyer alike and are listed in order of priority.

Rule One: Just because you can, does not mean you ought to.
Philippine President Benigno Aquino III himself admits that the Philippines, standing alone, is no match for China's military and economic might.
The fact that Chinese military assets can and are being deployed in ways that are not conducive for constructive engagement—as the House and Senate resolutions so indicate—will only further ostracize China from the international community.
There is no doubt that the world needs China as much as China needs the world, and it is plausible to presume that the Chinese government knows this fact.
In legal lingo our Rule One has been expressed generally as preemptory norms under many names, such as pacta sunt servanda (keep to your agreement, and in good faith), the prohibition on the threat of use of force or use of coercion, erga omnes (obligations, despite the absence of treaty law, which are owed to all mankind), right of safe passage, state sovereignty, self-defense and proportionality of means and ends.

However, our first golden rule cuts both ways.
Just because you ought to, does not mean you can.
Suppose the Philippines or Vietnam files suit.
There are hanging questions on whether China, despite being a party to UNCLOS, can be subject to the compulsory (contentious) jurisdiction of the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea, as well as the legal weight of the tribunal's advisory jurisdiction.
Constraints in time and space leave these questions elsewhere.

Dangerous and unsurveyed grounds
>>> geolocalization with the Marine GeoGarage <<<

Rule Two: Do not do (or be too obvious in doing) a classic "divide and conquer."
Even purportedly bilateral issues between two parties in agreements which make no mention of third parties will always function under a multilateral framework, and would almost always implicate an international or foreign law and policy question other than those put to the table.
When Philippine Ambassador Del Rosario raised the Spratlys question with US Senator John McCain in their June meeting, McCain, a former navy officer himself, warned Del Rosario that "China seeks to exploit the divisions among ASEAN members to play them off each other to press its own agenda."
A Washington Post opinion commented that "China would like the United States to stay out of its disputes with the Philippines, Vietnam, Malaysia and Brunei, so that it can deal with each of those weaker countries in turn."
There are reasons for the existence of multilateral frameworks, and even bilateral regimes will be subject to unstated (if not disavowed) broader norms which can be brought to bear upon ostensible bilateral dealings.
A good place to start would be the UN Charter itself.
Clearly the Chinese government knows this, because it sits as a permanent member of the UN Security Council.

Even if one can suppose that bilateralism can be self-contained somehow, it will still be difficult to suppose that any Nixon or Kissinger-style bilateral success story can find resonance in this day and age.
It is here where China can learn from the errors of the American past, even if it condemns the US for its "imperialism."
The history of American diplomacy is replete with great narratives and good case studies.
And, if we suppose ourselves worthy of the benefit of hindsight, those catalogues will be a repository of the greatest mistakes of law and war, a rich source for potential lesson drawing for China and for any other nation-state.
In fact, the very use of the term "bilateralism" and the choice of the vernacular of the debate itself can be outcome determinative of whether any third party involvement will draw in such accusations as undue "meddling" or "interfering" in an argument between two people.
On the other hand, greater currency of terms such as "multilateralism" or "multi-party frameworks" might imbue upon the very same phenomenon a more benevolent meaning, converting otherwise hostile interventionism into things like "mediation" or "arbitration."
Given the quickening pace and new dynamics of the Spratlys, and given China's own recognition of the China-ASEAN 2002 Code of Conduct, China might be better off by taking the ASEAN route.
It is smaller, easier to manage, and yet multipartisan.

Rule Three: It is not about the marriage, it is about the money.
Any legal regime should be accorded its own weight, as it is, and in light of its inherent limitations—in Holmesian dictum the international order is not a grand monolithic "overlaw" in which Platonists can find the right answer through sheer remembering.
There are multiple, multi-causal, and multi-directional dynamics at play, and normative argumentation might not catch up to these swiftly changing circumstances, which, no doubt, are clearly empirical and behavioral in nature.
One thing is certain, however:
The profit margin will surely be a bargaining chip if one were to approach the Spratlys question on the right footing.
The six-state jockeying over the Spratlys ultimately hinges on the question of resource-sharing of the world's most important commodity: oil.

Spratly Islands on Google Maps

Rule Four: It is all on Google Maps.
One account traces Chinese title over the Spratlys—or the entire South China Sea, depending on where you fall in the political spectrum—to an old Han dynasty map circa 110 AD.
An overview of existing scholarship attempts to trace the Chinese claim between 206 BC to 220 AD.
The claim is predicated on the theory that the South China Sea is a Chinese "lake," at least according to the Chinese.
But surely the standards by which we judge ourselves are a whole lot different now than they were back then, and since the 200 BC era there have been changes in cognitive awareness, interruptions of state continuity and existence, varying sovereign assertions and the dissolution of states, including those very states jockeying for the Spratlys today.
(It was once remarked that, through the same logic, Italy today can lay claim to the entire modern world through a Roman map).
What matters, as we stressed, is UNCLOS. UNCLOS contains the substantive law, at least in broad strokes, on how to measure the extent and degree of sovereignty a country or archipelagic state may exercise, and the baselines for each measurement.
Again constraints in time and space leave these questions better discussed elsewhere.
To short cut it all, just Google it.
It is all there.
Experiment with key phrases like "Spratlys," "Reed Bank" or "Recto Bank," "Palawan," "Zambales," "Paracels," and the like.
Who is closer to what island?
And who is complaining?
The better question is, who is actually there?
Google, and you shall find.

The Reed Bank, now officially called the Recto Bank, lies within the 200-nautical-mile exclusive economic zone, reckoned from the Philippine archipelagic baseline.
The Philippine government, in consortium with private oil companies, has been engaged in gas exploration and production under the Sampaguita project (along with the Malampaya project nearby).
Beyond the Recto Bank, since 1947 Philippine settlers and explorers have occupied main portions of the Spratlys.
Elections for local town officials were in fact held last year.
Filipinos have always referred to the Spratlys as the "Kalayaan" (Freedomland) Island Group.
Not only town elections, but among the six claimants involved in the Spratlys, it is only the Philippines which has an airstrip in the entire Spratly island group.
The airstrip is located on Pag-Asa Island, which is, with very little doubt, part of the Palawan province.

In our recent articles "China's Imperial Overstretch" and "China and the Mosquitoes," Daniel Wagner and I have argued that the Spratly island question is ultimately a litmus test for if and when China will begin to act as a responsible member of the international community, willing to engage other contestants in a rules-based regime in accordance with established norms of diplomacy and consistent with a nation of its importance and stature.
It seems that the Chinese government is struggling with this test.

Rule Five: People will always side with the underdog.
We do not have to cite black letter law on this one. In the movies underdogs will always win your sympathy.
While the US has been providing military assistance to the Philippines, this has always been for purposes of capacity building in its counter insurgency operations against Islamic militants in the wake of 9/11.
As the Philippine government decommissions its Vietnam War F-5 fighters, it appears that Secretary Clinton and the US Senate are realigning their assets for something else.

As the US wages war on three fronts, why did the Spratlys find its way to a unanimous Senate resolution while President Obama's bill asking for financial support for Libyan operations failed to pass muster?
Why did this seemingly unobtrusive smattering of volcanic activity turn out to be the subject of a US Senate resolution?
The Spratlys are just a bunch of islands checkering what appears to be a diamond-shape area beside the Palawan province.

Political will in the US government might have been driven by historical sentimentalism after all, moved perhaps by General MacArthur's famous words, "I shall return."
But ultimately the solution might be more psychic than legal: China needs to get rid of its victim-complex of having been colonized, even imminently dismembered, by Western powers, who, at one time or another, had been colonized by other rulers as well.

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