North Sea Fisheries Convention
International Convention for regulating the police of the North Sea fisheries outside territorial waters | |
---|---|
Signed | May 6, 1882 |
Location | The Hague |
Effective | May 15, 1884[1] |
Condition | Exchange of ratifications |
Expiration | September 26, 1976 |
Parties | |
Depositary | Netherlands government |
The North Sea Fisheries Convention, officially known as the International Convention for regulating the police of the North Sea fisheries outside territorial waters, was a treaty that was signed on May 6, 1882. The inaugural conference was intended to provide a set of regulations for North Sea fisheries. The High Contracting Parties, which included Great Britain, Germany, Denmark, Netherlands, Belgium and France, entered the convention for a period of five years.
The convention, which operated only outside the three-mile limit from land, was defined as follows:
- The fishermen of each country shall enjoy the exclusive right of fishery within the distance of 3 (nautical) miles (5.56 km) from low-water mark along the whole extent of the coasts of their respective countries, as well as of the dependent islands and banks.[2]
- As regards bays, the distance of 3 miles (5.56 km) shall be measured from a straight line drawn across the bay, in the part nearest the entrance, at the first point, where the width does not exceed 10 miles (18.5 km).[2]
- The present article shall not in any way prejudice the freedom of navigation and anchorage in territorial waters accorded to fishing boats, provided they conform to the special police regulations enacted by the powers to whom the shore belongs.[2]
A supplementary convention was signed at The Hague on November 16, 1887, among the same High Contracting Parties, relating to liquor traffic in the North Sea. It applies to the area set out in article 4 of the Convention of IV, May 6, 1882, and forbids the sale of spirituous liquors within it to persons on board fishing vessels. A reciprocal right of visit and search is granted under this convention to the cruisers entrusted with carrying out of its provisions.[2]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "International Convention for regulating the police of the North Sea fisheries outside territorial waters". Government of the Netherlands. Retrieved 25 February 2012.
- ^ a b c d public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "North Sea Fisheries Convention". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 19 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 787. One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the
Further reading
[edit]- Bangert, Kaare. "The effective enforcement of high seas fishing regimes: The case of the convention for the regulation of the policing of the north sea fisheries of 6 May 1882." in The Reality of International Law: Essays in Honour of Ian Brownlie (1999) pp: 1-20.
- Caddell, Richard, and Erik J. Molenaar, eds. Strengthening international fisheries law in an era of changing oceans (Bloomsbury Publishing, 2019).
External links
[edit]The texts of the 1882 and 1887 Conventions are available at [1] and [2].
- 1880s in the environment
- Treaties of the Netherlands
- Treaties of Denmark
- Treaties of the German Empire
- Treaties of the French Third Republic
- Treaties of the United Kingdom (1801–1922)
- Treaties of Belgium
- North Sea
- Fisheries treaties
- 1882 in the Netherlands
- 1882 treaties
- Treaties entered into force in 1884
- Fishing in France
- Fishing in Germany
- Fishing in the Netherlands
- Fishing in Denmark
- Fishing in the United Kingdom
- 1887 treaties
- 1887 in the Netherlands