International Environmental Obligations and Liabilities in Deep Seabed Mining
Should deep seabed mining (DSM) stop or proceed? The international community is now facing a difficult choice. No matter what decision is made, environmental consideration is the core of the issue. This book tackles the compelling question of how to secure the marine environmental protection in DSM from an international law perspective. It deals with two major research questions: What are the international environmental requirements of participants – the contractor, the sponsoring State and the International Seabed Authority (ISA)? What are the legal consequences for them when environmental damage occurs? In doing so, it analyses the international DSM legal regime and general international environmental principles, observes the functioning of the ISA, and draws on law and practice of various environmental treaty mechanisms. The examination reveals the potential practical difficulties as well as fundamental obstacles in the application of international environmental rules and principles in the specific context of DSM.
- Provides a complete legal picture of the environmental protection in deep seabed mining
- Subjects legal interpretation and application to the test of practical feasibility to show the strengths and limits of legal devices for environmental protection
- Engage readers through a reflective consideration of diverse positions of discussants in the international debate over the topic of deep seabed mining
Product details
No date availableHardback
9781108488303
400 pages
235 × 155 × 22 mm
0.74kg
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. Common heritage of mankind and protection of the marine environment
- 2. International seabed authority and its environmental mandate
- 3. International environmental obligations of the sponsoring state and contractor
- 4. Definition and measure of marine environmental damage
- 5. International environmental liability of the contractor
- 6. Alternatives to international environmental liability of the contractor
- 7. International environmental liabilities of the sponsoring state and the international seabed authority
- Conclusions
- Bibliography
- Index.