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High Seas Treaty (BBNJ Treaty)

Kartavya Desk Staff

Syllabus: Environment

Source: DTE

Context: Delegates have gathered in New York for the first Preparatory Commission session of the BBNJ Treaty, aiming to finalize implementation rules. India is a signatory but has yet to ratify the agreement.

About the BBNJ Treaty (High Seas Treaty):

What It Is: The Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction (BBNJ) Treaty is the third implementing agreement under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).

Objective: Protect marine biodiversity in the high seas. Ensure fair benefit-sharing from marine genetic resources. Mandate Environmental Impact Assessments (EIAs) for high-seas activities.

Protect marine biodiversity in the high seas.

• Ensure fair benefit-sharing from marine genetic resources.

• Mandate Environmental Impact Assessments (EIAs) for high-seas activities.

Coverage: Applies to areas beyond 200 nautical miles from national EEZs, which make up 64% of global oceans.

India’s Status: India has signed the treaty but has not yet ratified it.

Why the BBNJ Treaty Is Needed?

Marine Protection Gap: Only 1.44% of high seas are currently protected despite covering two-thirds of ocean space.

Unregulated Activities: Deep-sea mining, overfishing, and pollution operate with minimal international oversight.

Marine Genetic Resources (MGR): Rising commercial use of MGRs in pharmaceuticals and biotechnology necessitates a regulatory framework.

Equity in Ocean Use: Aims to prevent dominance by developed nations and ensure Global South access to ocean wealth.

Challenges to the BBNJ Treaty:

Low Ratification: As of April 2025, only 21 countries have ratified the treaty out of the required 60 for enforcement.

Geopolitical Tensions: Disputes in the South China Sea and Bay of Bengal delay consensus on Marine Protected Areas (MPAs).

Weak Enforcement: Lack of enforcement mechanisms and opt-out options risk weakening compliance.

Overlap with Other Conventions: Potential conflict with the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) over MGRs.

Financial Burden on Developing Nations: Capacity-building and tech transfer provisions lack binding support commitments.

Implementation Gaps: Treaty does not cover oil and gas exploration or pollution in EEZs, undermining ecological coherence.

Way Ahead:

Fast-Track Ratification: Urgent diplomatic push needed to achieve 60 ratifications, especially by UNOC-3 in France.

Inclusive Decision-Making: Scientific and technical bodies must have balanced regional representation and expertise.

Funding Mechanism: Ensure operationalization of the special fund with tailored contributions from developed countries.

Integrated Ocean Governance: Bridge governance between high seas and EEZs to address interconnected marine threats.

Monitoring & Transparency: Develop digital tools and global dashboards for tracking MPAs and EIA compliance.

Conclusion:

The BBNJ Treaty is a transformative tool for global ocean conservation. But without strong political will, institutional design, and equity-focused implementation, its goals will remain aspirational. The oceans, already under stress, can no longer wait for half-measures.

• The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has predicted a global sea level rise of about one meter by AD 2100. What would be its impact in India and the other countries in the Indian Ocean region? (UPSC-2023)

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

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