1992 OSPAR Convention
CONVENTION FOR THE PROTECTION OF THE MARINE ENVIRONMENT OF THE NORTH-EAST ATLANTIC
The Convention for the Protection of the Marine Environment of the North-East
Atlantic was opened for signature at the Ministerial Meeting of the Oslo
and Paris Commissions, Paris, 21-22 September 1992. The text of this Convention
is attached.
The Convention has been signed by all Contracting Parties to the Oslo
Convention and to the Paris Convention (Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France,
Germany, Iceland, Ireland, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden,
and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland), Luxembourg,
Switzerland and the Commission of the European Communities.
The signatures on behalf of Denmark and the United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Northern Ireland were accompanied by declarations, the texts
of which are also attached.
CONVENTION FOR THE PROTECTION
OF THE MARINE ENVIRONMENT
OF THE NORTH-EAST ATLANTIC
THE CONTRACTING PARTIES,
RECOGNISING that the marine environment and the fauna and flora
which it supports are of vital importance to all nations;
RECOGNISING the inherent worth of the marine environment of
the North-East Atlantic and the necessity for providing coordinated protection
for it;
RECOGNISING that concerted action at national, regional and
global levels is essential to prevent and eliminate marine pollution and
to achieve sustainable management of the maritime area, that is, the management
of human activities in such a manner that the marine ecosystem will continue
to sustain the legitimate uses of the sea and will continue to meet the
needs of present and future generations;
MINDFUL that the ecological equilibrium and the legitimate uses
of the sea are threatened by pollution;
CONSIDERING the recommendations of the United Nations Conference
on the Human Environment, held in Stockholm in June 1972;
CONSIDERING also the results of the United Nations Conference
on the Environment and Development held in Rio de Janeiro in June 1992;
RECALLING the relevant provisions of customary international
law reflected in Part XII of the United Nations Law of the Sea Convention
and, in particular, Article 197 on global and regional cooperation for
the protection and preservation of the marine environment;
CONSIDERING that the common interests of States concerned with
the same marine area should induce them to cooperate at regional or sub-regional
levels;
RECALLING the positive results obtained within the context of
the Convention for the prevention of marine pollution by dumping from ships
and aircraft signed in Oslo on 15th February 1972, as amended by the protocols
of 2nd March 1983 and 5th December 1989, and the Convention for the prevention
of marine pollution from land-based sources signed in Paris on 4th June
1974, as amended by the protocol of 26th March 1986;
CONVINCED that further international action to prevent and eliminate
pollution of the sea should be taken without delay, as part of progressive
and coherent measures to protect the marine environment;
RECOGNISING that it may be desirable to adopt, on the regional
level, more stringent measures with respect to the prevention and elimination
of pollution of the marine environment or with respect to the protection
of the marine environment against the adverse effects of human activities
than are provided for in international conventions or agreements with a
global scope;
RECOGNISING that questions relating to the management of fisheries
are appropriately regulated under international and regional agreements
dealing specifically with such questions;
CONSIDERING that the present Oslo and Paris Conventions do not
adequately control some of the many sources of pollution, and that it is
therefore justifiable to replace them with the present Convention, which
addresses all sources of pollution of the marine environment and the adverse
effects of human activities upon it, takes into account the precautionary
principle and strengthens regional cooperation;
HAVE AGREED as follows:
ARTICLE 1
DEFINITIONS
For the purposes of the Convention:
- "Maritime area" means the internal waters and the territorial
seas of the Contracting Parties, the sea beyond and adjacent to the territorial
sea under the jurisdiction of the coastal state to the extent recognised
by international law, and the high seas, including the bed of all those
waters and its sub-soil, situated within the following limits:
- those parts of the Atlantic and Arctic Oceans and their dependent seas
which lie north of 36 north latitude and between 42 west longitude and
51 east longitude, but excluding:
- the Baltic Sea and the Belts lying to the south and east of lines drawn
from Hasenore Head to Gniben Point, from Korshage to Spodsbjerg and from
Gilbjerg Head to Kullen,
- the Mediterranean Sea and its dependent seas as far as the point of
intersection of the parallel of 36 north latitude and the meridian of 5
36' west longitude;
- that part of the Atlantic Ocean north of 59 north latitude and between
44 west longitude and 42 west longitude.
- "Internal waters" means the waters on the landward side of
the baselines from which the breadth of the territorial sea is measured,
extending in the case of watercourses up to the freshwater limit.
- "Freshwater limit" means the place in a watercourse where,
at low tide and in a period of low freshwater flow, there is an appreciable
increase in salinity due to the presence of seawater.
- "Pollution" means the introduction by man, directly or indirectly,
of substances or energy into the maritime area which results, or is likely
to result, in hazards to human health, harm to living resources and marine
ecosystems, damage to amenities or interference with other legitimate uses
of the sea.
- "Land-based sources" means point and diffuse sources on land
from which substances or energy reach the maritime area by water, through
the air, or directly from the coast. It includes sources associated with
any deliberate disposal under the sea-bed made accessible from land by
tunnel, pipeline or other means and sources associated with man-made structures
placed, in the maritime area under the jurisdiction of a Contracting Party,
other than for the purpose of offshore activities.
- "Dumping" means
- any deliberate disposal in the maritime area of wastes or other matter
- from vessels or aircraft;
- from offshore installations;
- any deliberate disposal in the maritime area of
- vessels or aircraft;
- offshore installations and offshore pipelines.
- "Dumping" does not include:
- the disposal in accordance with the International Convention for the
Prevention of Pollution from Ships, 1973, as modified by the Protocol of
1978 relating thereto, or other applicable international law, of wastes
or other matter incidental to, or derived from, the normal operations of
vessels or aircraft or offshore installations other than wastes or other
matter transported by or to vessels or aircraft or offshore installations
for the purpose of disposal of such wastes or other matter or derived from
the treatment of such wastes or other matter on such vessels or aircraft
or offshore installations;
- placement of matter for a purpose other than the mere disposal thereof,
provided that, if the placement is for a purpose other than that for which
the matter was originally designed or constructed, it is in accordance
with the relevant provisions of the Convention; and
- for the purposes of Annex III, the leaving wholly or partly in place
of a disused offshore installation or disused offshore pipeline, provided
that any such operation takes place in accordance with any relevant provision
of the Convention and with other relevant international law.
- "Incineration" means any deliberate combustion of wastes
or other matter in the maritime area for the purpose of their thermal destruction.
- "Incineration" does not include the thermal destruction of
wastes or other matter in accordance with applicable international law
incidental to, or derived from the normal operation of vessels or aircraft,
or offshore installations other than the thermal destruction of wastes
or other matter on vessels or aircraft or offshore installations operating
for the purpose of such thermal destruction.
- "Offshore activities" means activities carried out in the
maritime area for the purposes of the exploration, appraisal or exploitation
of liquid and gaseous hydrocarbons.
- "Offshore sources" means offshore installations and offshore
pipelines from which substances or energy reach the maritime area.
- "Offshore installation" means any man-made structure, plant
or vessel or parts thereof, whether floating or fixed to the seabed, placed
within the maritime area for the purpose of offshore activities.
- "Offshore pipeline" means any pipeline which has been placed
in the maritime area for the purpose of offshore activities.
- "Vessels or aircraft" means waterborne or airborne craft
of any type whatsoever, their parts and other fittings. This expression
includes air-cushion craft, floating craft whether self-propelled or not,
and other man-made structures in the maritime area and their equipment,
but excludes offshore installations and offshore pipelines.
- "Wastes or other matter" does not include:
- human remains;
- offshore installations;
- offshore pipelines;
- unprocessed fish and fish offal discarded from fishing vessels.
- "Convention" means, unless the text otherwise indicates,
the Convention for the Protection of the Marine Environment of the North-East
Atlantic, its Annexes and Appendices.
- "Oslo Convention" means the Convention for the Prevention
of Marine Pollution by Dumping from Ships and Aircraft signed in Oslo on
15th February 1972, as amended by the protocols of 2nd March 1983 and 5th
December 1989.
- "Paris Convention" means the Convention for the Prevention
of Marine Pollution from Land-based Sources, signed in Paris on 4th June
1974, as amended by the protocol of 26th March 1986.
- "Regional economic integration organisation" means an organisation
constituted by sovereign States of a given region which has competence
in respect of matters governed by the Convention and has been duly authorised,
in accordance with its internal procedures, to sign, ratify, accept, approve
or accede to the Convention.
ARTICLE 2
GENERAL OBLIGATIONS
-
- The Contracting Parties shall, in accordance with the provisions of
the Convention, take all possible steps to prevent and eliminate pollution
and shall take the necessary measures to protect the maritime area against
the adverse effects of human activities so as to safeguard human health
and to conserve marine ecosystems and, when practicable, restore marine
areas which have been adversely affected.
- To this end Contracting Parties shall, individually and jointly, adopt
programmes and measures and shall harmonise their policies and strategies.
- The Contracting Parties shall apply:
- the precautionary principle, by virtue of which preventive measures
are to be taken when there are reasonable grounds for concern that substances
or energy introduced, directly or indirectly, into the marine environment
may bring about hazards to human health, harm living resources and marine
ecosystems, damage amenities or interfere with other legitimate uses of
the sea, even when there is no conclusive evidence of a causal relationship
between the inputs and the effects;
- the polluter pays principle, by virtue of which the costs of pollution
prevention, control and reduction measures are to be borne by the polluter.
- In implementing the Convention, Contracting Parties shall adopt programmes
and measures which contain, where appropriate, time-limits for their completion
and which take full account of the use of the latest technological developments
and practices designed to prevent and eliminate pollution fully.
- To this end they shall:
- taking into account the criteria set forth in Appendix 1, define with
respect to programmes and measures the application of, inter alia,
- best available techniques
- best environmental practice
including, where appropriate, clean technology;
- in carrying out such programmes and measures, ensure the application
of best available techniques and best environmental practice as so defined,
including, where appropriate, clean technology.
- The Contracting Parties shall apply the measures they adopt in such
a way as to prevent an increase in pollution of the sea outside the maritime
area or in other parts of the environment.
- No provision of the Convention shall be interpreted as preventing the
Contracting Parties from taking, individually or jointly, more stringent
measures with respect to the prevention and elimination of pollution of
the maritime area or with respect to the protection of the maritime area
against the adverse effects of human activities.
ARTICLE 3
POLLUTION FROM LAND-BASED SOURCES
The Contracting Parties shall take, individually and jointly,
all possible steps to prevent and eliminate pollution from land-based sources
in accordance with the provisions of the Convention, in particular as provided
for in Annex I.
ARTICLE 4
POLLUTION BY DUMPING OR INCINERATION
The Contracting Parties shall take, individually and jointly,
all possible steps to prevent and eliminate pollution by dumping or incineration
of wastes or other matter in accordance with the provisions of the Convention,
in particular as provided for in Annex II.
ARTICLE 5
POLLUTION FROM OFFSHORE SOURCES
The Contracting Parties shall take, individually and jointly,
all possible steps to prevent and eliminate pollution from offshore sources
in accordance with the provisions of the Convention, in particular as provided
for in Annex III.
ARTICLE 6
ASSESSMENT OF THE QUALITY OF THE MARINE ENVIRONMENT
The Contracting Parties shall, in accordance with the provisions
of the Convention, in particular as provided for in Annex IV:
- undertake and publish at regular intervals joint assessments of the
quality status of the marine environment and of its development, for the
maritime area or for regions or sub-regions thereof;
- include in such assessments both an evaluation of the effectiveness
of the measures taken and planned for the protection of the marine environment
and the identification of priorities for action.
ARTICLE 7
POLLUTION FROM OTHER SOURCES
The Contracting Parties shall cooperate with a view to adopting
Annexes, in addition to the Annexes mentioned in Articles 3, 4, 5 and 6
above, prescribing measures, procedures and standards to protect the maritime
area against pollution from other sources, to the extent that such pollution
is not already the subject of effective measures agreed by other international
organisations or prescribed by other international conventions.
ARTICLE 8
SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNICAL RESEARCH
- To further the aims of the Convention, the Contracting Parties shall
establish complementary or joint programmes of scientific or technical
research and, in accordance with a standard procedure, to transmit to the
Commission:
- the results of such complementary, joint or other relevant research;
- details of other relevant programmes of scientific and technical research.
- In so doing, the Contracting Parties shall have regard to the work
carried out, in these fields, by the appropriate international organisations
and agencies.
ARTICLE 9
ACCESS TO INFORMATION
- The Contracting Parties shall ensure that their competent authorities
are required to make available the information described in paragraph 2
of this Article to any natural or legal person, in response to any reasonable
request, without that person's having to prove an interest, without unreasonable
charges, as soon as possible and at the latest within two months.
- The information referred to in paragraph 1 of this Article is any available
information in written, visual, aural or data-base form on the state of
the maritime area, on activities or measures adversely affecting or likely
to affect it and on activities or measures introduced in accordance with
the Convention.
- The provisions of this Article shall not affect the right of Contracting
Parties, in accordance with their national legal systems and applicable
international regulations, to provide for a request for such information
to be refused where it affects:
- the confidentiality of the proceedings of public authorities, international
relations and national defence;
- public security;
- matters which are, or have been, sub judice, or under enquiry
(including disciplinary enquiries), or which are the subject of preliminary
investigation proceedings;
- commercial and industrial confidentiality, including intellectual property;
- the confidentiality of personal data and/or files;
- material supplied by a third party without that party being under a
legal obligation to do so;
- material, the disclosure of which would make it more likely that the
environment to which such material related would be damaged.
- The reasons for a refusal to provide the information requested must
be given.
ARTICLE 10
COMMISSION
- A Commission, made up of representatives of each of the Contracting
Parties, is hereby established. The Commission shall meet at regular intervals
and at any time when, due to special circumstances, it is so decided in
accordance with the Rules of Procedure.
- It shall be the duty of the Commission:
- to supervise the implementation of the Convention;
- generally to review the condition of the maritime area, the effectiveness
of the measures being adopted, the priorities and the need for any additional
or different measures;
- to draw up, in accordance with the General Obligations of the Convention,
programmes and measures for the prevention and elimination of pollution
and for the control of activities which may, directly or indirectly, adversely
affect the maritime area; such programmes and measure may, when appropriate,
include economic instruments;
- to establish at regular intervals its programme of work;
- to set up such subsidiary bodies as it considers necessary and to define
their terms of reference;
- to consider and, where appropriate, adopt proposals for the amendment
of the Convention in accordance with Articles 15, 16, 17, 18, 19 and 27;
- to discharge the functions conferred by Articles 21 and 23 and such
other functions as may be appropriate under the terms of the Convention;
- To these ends the Commission may, inter alia, adopt decisions
and recommendations in accordance with Article 13.
- The Commission shall draw up its Rules of Procedure which shall be
adopted by unanimous vote of the Contracting Parties.
- The Commission shall draw up its Financial Regulations which shall
be adopted by unanimous vote of the Contracting Parties.
ARTICLE 11
OBSERVERS
- The Commission may, by unanimous vote of the Contracting Parties, decide
to admit as an observer:
- any State which is not a Contracting Party to the Convention;
- any international governmental or any non-governmental organisation
the activities of which are related to the Convention.
- Such observers may participate in meetings of the Commission but without
the right to vote and may present to the Commission any information or
reports relevant to the objectives of the Convention.
- The conditions for the admission and the participation of observers
shall be set in the Rules of Procedure of the Commission.
ARTICLE 12
SECRETARIAT
- A permanent Secretariat is hereby established.
- The Commission shall appoint an Executive Secretary and determine the
duties of that post and the terms and conditions upon which it is to be
held.
- The Executive Secretary shall perform the functions that are necessary
for the administration of the Convention and for the work of the Commission
as well as the other tasks entrusted to the Executive Secretary by the
Commission in accordance with its Rules of Procedure and its Financial
Regulations.
ARTICLE 13
DECISIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
- Decisions and recommendations shall be adopted by unanimous vote of
the Contracting Parties. Should unanimity not be attainable, and unless
otherwise provided in the Convention, the Commission may nonetheless adopt
decisions or recommendations by a three-quarters majority vote of the Contracting
Parties.
- A decision shall be binding on the expiry of a period of two hundred
days after its adoption for those Contracting Parties that voted for it
and have not within that period notified the Executive Secretary in writing
that they are unable to accept the decision, provided that at the expiry
of that period three-quarters of the Contracting Parties have either voted
for the decision and not withdrawn their acceptance or notified the Executive
Secretary in writing that they are able to accept the decision. Such a
decision shall become binding on any other Contracting Party which has
notified the Executive Secretary in writing that it is able to accept the
decision from the moment of that notification or after the expiry of a
period of two hundred days after the adoption of the decision, whichever
is later.
- A notification under paragraph 2 of this Article to the Executive Secretary
may indicate that a Contracting Party is unable to accept a decision insofar
as it relates to one or more of its dependent or autonomous territories
to which the Convention applies.
- All decisions adopted by the Commission shall, where appropriate, contain
provisions specifying the timetable by which the decision shall be implemented.
- Recommendations shall have no binding force.
- Decisions concerning any Annex or Appendix shall be taken only by the
Contracting Parties bound by the Annex or Appendix concerned.
ARTICLE 14
STATUS OF ANNEXES AND APPENDICES
- The Annexes and Appendices form an integral part of the Convention.
- The Appendices shall be of a scientific, technical or administrative
nature.
ARTICLE 15
AMENDMENT OF THE CONVENTION
- Without prejudice to the provisions of paragraph 2 of Article 27 and
to specific provisions applicable to the adoption or amendment of Annexes
or Appendices, an amendment to the Convention shall be governed by the
present Article.
- Any Contracting Party may propose an amendment to the Convention. The
text of the proposed amendment shall be communicated to the Contracting
Parties by the Executive Secretary of the Commission at least six months
before the meeting of the Commission at which it is proposed for adoption.
The Executive Secretary shall also communicate the proposed amendment to
the signatories to the Convention for information.
- The Commission shall adopt the amendment by unanimous vote of the Contracting
Parties.
- The adopted amendment shall be submitted by the Depositary Government
to the Contracting Parties for ratification, acceptance or approval. Ratification,
acceptance or approval of the amendment shall be notified to the Depositary
Government in writing.
- The amendment shall enter into force for those Contracting Parties
which have ratified, accepted or approved it on the thirtieth day after
receipt by the Depositary Government of notification of its ratification,
acceptance or approval by at least seven Contracting Parties. Thereafter
the amendment shall enter into force for any other Contracting Party on
the thirtieth day after that Contracting Party has deposited its instrument
of ratification, acceptance or approval of the amendment.
ARTICLE 16
ADOPTION OF ANNEXES
The provisions of Article 15 relating to the amendment of the
Convention shall also apply to the proposal, adoption and entry into force
of an Annex to the Convention, except that the Commission shall adopt any
Annex referred to in Article 7 by a three-quarters majority vote of the
Contracting Parties.
ARTICLE 17
AMENDMENT OF ANNEXES
- The provisions of Article 15 relating to the amendment of the Convention
shall also apply to an amendment to an Annex to the Convention, except
that the Commission shall adopt amendments to any Annex referred to in
Articles 3, 4, 5, 6 or 7 by a three-quarters majority vote of the Contracting
Parties bound by that Annex.
- If the amendment of an Annex is related to an amendment to the Convention,
the amendment of the Annex shall be governed by the same provisions as
apply to the amendment to the Convention.
ARTICLE 18
ADOPTION OF APPENDICES
- If a proposed Appendix is related to an amendment to the Convention
or an Annex, proposed for adoption in accordance with Article 15 or Article
17, the proposal, adoption and entry into force of that Appendix shall
be governed by the same provisions as apply to the proposal, adoption and
entry into force of that amendment.
- If a proposed Appendix is related to an Annex to the Convention, proposed
for adoption in accordance with Article 16, the proposal, adoption and
entry into force of that Appendix shall be governed by the same provisions
as apply to the proposal, adoption and entry into force of that Annex.
ARTICLE 19
AMENDMENT OF APPENDICES
- Any Contracting Party bound by an Appendix may propose an amendment
to that Appendix. The text of the proposed amendment shall be communicated
to all Contracting Parties to the Convention by the Executive Secretary
of the Commission as provided for in paragraph 2 of Article 15.
- The Commission shall adopt the amendment to an Appendix by a three-quarters
majority vote of the Contracting Parties bound by that Appendix.
- An amendment to an Appendix shall enter into force on the expiry of
a period of two hundred days after its adoption for those Contracting Parties
which are bound by that Appendix and have not within that period notified
the Depositary Government in writing that they are unable to accept that
amendment, provided that at the expiry of that period three-quarters of
the Contracting Parties bound by that Appendix have either voted for the
amendment and not withdrawn their acceptance or have notified the Depositary
Government in writing that they are able to accept the amendment.
- A notification under paragraph 3 of this Article to the Depositary
Government may indicate that a Contracting Party is unable to accept the
amendment insofar as it relates to one or more of its dependent or autonomous
territories to which the Convention applies.
- An amendment to an Appendix shall become binding on any other Contracting
Party bound by the Appendix which has notified the Depositary Government
in writing that it is able to accept the amendment from the moment of that
notification or after the expiry of a period of two hundred days after
the adoption of the amendment, whichever is later.
- The Depositary Government shall without delay notify all Contracting
Parties of any such notification received.
- If the amendment of an Appendix is related to an amendment to the Convention
or an Annex, the amendment of the Appendix shall be governed by the same
provisions as apply to the amendment to the Convention or that Annex.
ARTICLE 20
RIGHT TO VOTE
- Each Contracting Party shall have one vote in the Commission.
- Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph 1 of this Article, the
European Economic Community and other regional economic integration organisations,
within the areas of their competence, are entitled to a number of votes
equal to the number of their Member States which are Contracting Parties
to the Convention. Those organisations shall not exercise their right to
vote in cases where their Member States exercise theirs and conversely.
ARTICLE 21
TRANSBOUNDARY POLLUTION
- When pollution originating from a Contracting Party is likely to prejudice
the interests of one or more of the other Contracting Parties to the Convention,
the Contracting Parties concerned shall enter into consultation, at the
request of any one of them, with a view to negotiating a cooperation agreement.
- At the request of any Contracting Party concerned, the Commission shall
consider the question and may make recommendations with a view to reaching
a satisfactory solution.
- An agreement referred to in paragraph 1 of this Article may, inter
alia, define the areas to which it shall apply, the quality objectives
to be achieved and the methods for achieving these objectives, including
methods for the application of appropriate standards and the scientific
and technical information to be collected.
- The Contracting Parties signatory to such an agreement shall, through
the medium of the Commission, inform the other Contracting Parties of its
purport and of the progress made in putting it into effect.
ARTICLE 22
REPORTING TO THE COMMISSION
The Contracting Parties shall report to the Commission at regular
intervals on:
- the legal, regulatory, or other measures taken by them for the implementation
of the provisions of the Convention and of decisions and recommendations
adopted thereunder, including in particular measures taken to prevent and
punish conduct in contravention of those provisions;
- the effectiveness of the measures referred to in subparagraph (a) of
this Article;
- problems encountered in the implementation of the provisions referred
to in subparagraph (a) of this Article.
ARTICLE 23
COMPLIANCE
The Commission shall:
- on the basis of the periodical reports referred to in Article 22 and
any other report submitted by the Contracting Parties, assess their compliance
with the Convention and the decisions and recommendations adopted thereunder;
- when appropriate, decide upon and call for steps to bring about full
compliance with the Convention, and decisions adopted thereunder, and promote
the implementation of recommendations, including measures to assist a Contracting
Party to carry out its obligations.
ARTICLE 24
REGIONALISATION
The Commission may decide that any decision or recommendation
adopted by it shall apply to all, or a specified part, of the maritime
area and may provide for different timetables to be applied, having regard
to the differences between ecological and economic conditions in the various
regions and sub-regions covered by the Convention.
ARTICLE 25
SIGNATURE
The Convention shall be open for signature at Paris from 22nd
September 1992 to 30th June 1993 by:
- the Contracting Parties to the Oslo Convention or the Paris Convention;
- any other coastal State bordering the maritime area;
- any State located upstream on watercourses reaching the maritime area;
- any regional economic integration organisation having as a member at
least one State to which any of the subparagraphs (a) to (c) of this Article
applies.
ARTICLE 26
RATIFICATION, ACCEPTANCE OR APPROVAL
The Convention shall be subject to ratification, acceptance
or approval. The instruments of ratification, acceptance or approval shall
be deposited with the Government of the French Republic.
ARTICLE 27
ACCESSIONS
- After 30th June 1993, the Convention shall be open for accession by
the States and regional economic integration organisations referred to
in Article 25.
- The Contracting Parties may unanimously invite States or regional economic
integration organisations not referred to in Article 25 to accede to the
Convention. In the case of such an accession, the definition of the maritime
area shall, if necessary, be amended by a decision of the Commission adopted
by unanimous vote of the Contracting Parties. Any such amendment shall
enter into force after unanimous approval of all the Contracting Parties
on the thirtieth day after the receipt of the last notification by the
Depositary Government.
- Any such accession shall relate to the Convention including any Annex
and any Appendix that have been adopted at the date of such accession,
except when the instrument of accession contains an express declaration
of non-acceptance of one or several Annexes other than Annexes I, II, III
and IV.
- The instruments of accession shall be deposited with the Government
of the French Republic.
ARTICLE 28
RESERVATIONS
No reservation to the Convention may be made.
ARTICLE 29
ENTRY INTO FORCE
------
- The Convention shall enter into force on the thirtieth day following
the date on which all Contracting Parties to the Oslo Convention and all
Contracting Parties to the Paris Convention have deposited their instrument
of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession.
- For any State or regional economic integration organisation not referred
to in paragraph 1 of this Article, the Convention shall enter into force
in accordance with paragraph 1 of this Article, or on the thirtieth day
following the date of the deposit of the instrument of ratification, acceptance,
approval or accession by that State or regional economic integration organisations,
whichever is later.
ARTICLE 30
WITHDRAWAL
- At any time after the expiry of two years from the date of entry into
force of the Convention for a Contracting Party, that Contracting Party
may withdraw from the Convention by notification in writing to the Depositary
Government.
- Except as may be otherwise provided in an Annex other than Annexes
I to IV to the Convention, any Contracting Party may at any time after
the expiry of two years from the date of entry into force of such Annex
for that Contracting Party withdraw from such Annex by notification in
writing to the Depositary Government.
- Any withdrawal referred to in paragraphs 1 and 2 of this Article shall
take effect one year after the date on which the notification of that withdrawal
is received by the Depositary Government.
ARTICLE 31
REPLACEMENT OF THE OSLO AND PARIS CONVENTIONS
- Upon its entry into force, the Convention shall replace the Oslo and
Paris Conventions as between the Contracting Parties.
- Notwithstanding paragraph 1 of this Article, decisions, recommendations
and all other agreements adopted under the Oslo Convention or the Paris
Convention shall continue to be applicable, unaltered in their legal nature,
to the extent that they are compatible with, or not explicitly terminated
by, the Convention, any decisions or, in the case of existing recommendations,
any recommendations adopted thereunder.
ARTICLE 32
SETTLEMENT OF DISPUTES
- Any disputes between Contracting Parties relating to the interpretation
or application of the Convention, which cannot be settled otherwise by
the Contracting Parties concerned, for instance by means of inquiry or
conciliation within the Commission, shall at the request of any of those
Contracting Parties, be submitted to arbitration under the conditions laid
down in this Article.
- Unless the parties to the dispute decide otherwise, the procedure of
the arbitration referred to in paragraph 1 of this Article shall be in
accordance with paragraphs 3 to 10 of this Article.
- At the request addressed by one Contracting Party to another Contracting
Party in accordance with paragraph 1 of this Article, an arbitral tribunal
shall be constituted. The request for arbitration shall state the subject
matter of the application including in particular the Articles of the Convention,
the interpretation or application of which is in dispute.
- The applicant party shall inform the Commission that it has requested
the setting up of an arbitral tribunal, stating the name of the other party
to the dispute and the Articles of the Convention the interpretation or
application of which, in its opinion, is in dispute. The Commission shall
forward the information thus received to all Contracting Parties to the
Convention.
- The arbitral tribunal shall consist of three members: each of the parties
to the dispute shall appoint an arbitrator; the two arbitrators so appointed
shall designate by common agreement the third arbitrator who shall be the
chairman of the tribunal. The latter shall not be a national of one of
the parties to the dispute, nor have his usual place of residence in the
territory of one of these parties, nor be employed by any of them, nor
have dealt with the case in any other capacity.
- If the chairman of the arbitral tribunal has not been designated within
two months of the appointment of the second arbitrator, the President of
the International Court of Justice shall, at the request of either party,
designate him within a further two months' period.
- If one of the parties to the dispute does not appoint an arbitrator
within two months of receipt of the request, the other party may inform
the President of the International Court of Justice who shall designate
the chairman of the arbitral tribunal within a further two months' period.
Upon designation, the chairman of the arbitral tribunal shall request the
party which has not appointed an arbitrator to do so within two months.
After such period, he shall inform the President of the International Court
of Justice who shall make this appointment within a further two months'
period.
- The arbitral tribunal shall decide according to the rules of international
law and, in particular, those of the Convention.
- Any arbitral tribunal constituted under the provisions of this Article
shall draw up its own rules of procedure.
- In the event of a dispute as to whether the arbitral tribunal has jurisdiction,
the matter shall be decided by the decision of the arbitral tribunal.
- The decisions of the arbitral tribunal, both on procedure and on substance,
shall be taken by majority voting of its members.
- The arbitral tribunal may take all appropriate measures in order to
establish the facts. It may, at the request of one of the parties, recommend
essential interim measures of protection.
- If two or more arbitral tribunals constituted under the provisions
of this Article are seized of requests with identical or similar subjects,
they may inform themselves of the procedures for establishing the facts
and take them into account as far as possible.
- The parties to the dispute shall provide all facilities necessary for
the effective conduct of the proceedings.
- The absence or default of a party to the dispute shall not constitute
an impediment to the proceedings.
- Unless the arbitral tribunal determines otherwise because of the particular
circumstances of the case, the expenses of the tribunal, including the
remuneration of its members, shall be borne by the parties to the dispute
in equal shares. The tribunal shall keep a record of all its expenses,
and shall furnish a final statement thereof to the parties.
- Any Contracting Party that has an interest of a legal nature in the
subject matter of the dispute which may be affected by the decision in
the case, may intervene in the proceedings with the consent of the tribunal.
- The award of the arbitral tribunal shall be accompanied by a statement
of reasons. It shall be final and binding upon the parties to the dispute.
- Any dispute which may arise between the parties concerning the interpretation
or execution of the award may be submitted by either party to the arbitral
tribunal which made the award or, if the latter cannot be seized thereof,
to another arbitral tribunal constituted for this purpose in the same manner
as the first.
ARTICLE 33
DUTIES OF THE DEPOSITARY GOVERNMENT
The Depositary Government shall inform the Contracting Parties
and the signatories to the Convention:
- of the deposit of instruments of ratification, acceptance, approval
or accession, of declarations of non-acceptance and of notifications of
withdrawal in accordance with Articles 26, 27 and 30;
- of the date on which the Convention comes into force in accordance
with Article 29;
- of the receipt of notifications of acceptance, of the deposit of instruments
of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession and of the entry into
force of amendments to the Convention and of the adoption and amendment
of Annexes or Appendices, in accordance with Articles 15, 16, 17, 18 and
19.
ARTICLE 34
ORIGINAL TEXT
The original of the Convention, of which the French and English
texts shall be equally authentic, shall be deposited with the Government
of the French Republic which shall send certified copies thereof to the
Contracting Parties and the signatories to the Convention and shall deposit
a certified copy with the Secretary General of the United Nations for registration
and publication in accordance with Article 102 of the United Nations Charter.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the undersigned, being duly authorised by their
respective Governments, have signed this Convention.
DONE at Paris, on the twenty-second day of September 1992
© Copyright OSPAR Commission 2004 - All rights Reserved.
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