International Efforts to Establish Rules on Liability for Offshore Activities

Elis Tarelli
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Abstract

Offshore activities account for a significant and steadily growing portion of worldwide oil and gas production. According to a report by the Group of Experts on the Scientific Aspects of Marine Pollution (“GESAMP”) in 2007, it is estimated that between 25 and 30% of global oil production comes from offshore oil and gas reservoirs, with the main production areas being located in the North Sea, Gulf of Mexico, Brazil and West Africa. However, this is not without costs to the marine environment. Oil pollution is the main concern with respect to sources of marine pollution. Despite advancements in the technology for the construction and operation of offshore installations, which have made possible that pollution levels from such activities be considerably low, offshore operations still remain a source of marine pollution because of the processes and risks they involve. Sometimes these processes and risks have been the cause of major pollution incidents. Many pollution incidents from offshore operations tend to be and normally are domestic in character. “Domestic pollution” in this case implies the situation where damage is suffered within the coastal State which has jurisdiction over the offshore operations causing the incident. Because offshore activities are usually carried out in the continental shelf of a coastal State, in many cases it will be that same coastal State which is likely to be the victim of an oil pollution incident. However, oil pollution can cross boundaries of national jurisdictions. Some sea areas with active offshore oil operations in their continental shelves are more prone to sustaining damage from international pollution than some other. Considering this problem, can the domestic legal system of a coastal State still be sufficient and effective to provide compensation in cases of “international pollution”, i.e. when oil from the continental shelf of a coastal State floats over to the continental shelf or shore of another coastal State? Could the citizens of the coastal State sustaining pollution damage be able to successfully claim compensation in the courts of that coastal State, even though damage was caused by offshore installations under the jurisdiction of a foreign State? Pollution from offshore installations affects a limited area of the continental shelf and/or the shore of the coastal State under which jurisdiction the installations operate, and in the worst case areas of the continental shelf and/or the shore of one or more coastal States located in the vicinity of the first coastal State. Thus one may question what sort of international regulation would be more effective and provide the most efficient mechanisms for determining liability and compensation for pollution damage, namely should it be a global or a regional regulation? Should this international regulation aim the uniformity of rules at an international level, or are pollution problems better addressed by regional agreements that take into account the different conditions of the particular areas where offshore operations are conducted?
建立离岸活动责任规则的国际努力
海上活动在全球石油和天然气生产中占据了重要且稳步增长的份额。根据2007年海洋污染科学专家组(GESAMP)的一份报告,估计全球石油产量的25%至30%来自海上油气储层,主要产区位于北海、墨西哥湾、巴西和西非。然而,这对海洋环境并非没有代价。石油污染是海洋污染源的主要问题。尽管近海设施的建造和操作技术有了进步,使这类活动的污染程度相当低,但由于近海作业所涉及的过程和风险,它仍然是海洋污染的一个来源。有时,这些过程和风险是造成重大污染事件的原因。海上作业造成的许多污染事件往往是国内性质的。在这种情况下,“国内污染”是指在对造成事故的近海作业有管辖权的沿海国境内遭受损害的情况。由于近海活动通常是在沿海国的大陆架上进行的,因此在许多情况下,可能成为石油污染事件受害者的将是同一沿海国。然而,石油污染可以跨越国家管辖的边界。在大陆架上进行海上石油作业的一些海域比其他海域更容易受到国际污染的持续损害。考虑到这个问题,沿海国的国内法律制度是否仍然足以和有效地在“国际污染”的情况下提供赔偿,即当一个沿海国大陆架的石油浮到另一个沿海国的大陆架或海岸时?遭受污染损害的沿海国公民是否能够在该沿海国法院成功地要求赔偿,即使损害是由外国管辖下的近海设施造成的?近海设施的污染影响到这些设施在其管辖下运作的大陆架和(或)沿海国的有限区域,在最坏的情况下,影响到第一沿海国附近的大陆架和(或)一个或多个沿海国的海岸。因此,人们可能会问,什么样的国际条例会更有效,并为确定污染损害的责任和赔偿提供最有效的机制,即应该是一项全球条例还是一项区域条例?这项国际条例的目的是在国际一级统一规则,还是考虑到进行离岸作业的特定地区的不同情况的区域协定能更好地解决污染问题?
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