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Territorial Waters
*** Shopping-Tip: Territorial Waters
Image:Map of Sealand with territorial waters.png Sealand.html" title="Meaning of thumb thumb|250px|Map of [[Sealand and the United Kingdom, with territorial water claims of 3nm and 12nm shown..html" title="Meaning of 250px|Map of [[Sealand">thumb|250px|Map of [[Sealand and the United Kingdom, with territorial water claims of 3nm and 12nm shown.">250px|Map of [[Sealand">thumb|250px|Map of [[Sealand and the United Kingdom, with territorial water claims of 3nm and 12nm shown.
'''Territorial waters''', or a '''territorial sea''', is a belt of coastal waters extending twelve
nautical miles from the
shore of a
littoral state that is regarded as the sovereign territory of the state, except that foreign ships (both military and civilian) are allowed innocent passage through it.
A
sovereign state has complete
jurisdiction over '''internal waters''', where not even innocent passage is allowed. Territorial waters extend out 12 nautical miles (22 km) from the mean low water mark adjacent to land, or from internal waters, per the
1994 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. The mean low water mark may be an unlimited distance from permanently exposed land provided that some portion of elevations exposed at low tide but covered at high tide (like mud flats) is within 12 nautical miles of permanently exposed land. Completely enclosed seas, lakes, and rivers are considered internal waters, as are waters landward of lines connecting fringing islands along a coast or landward of lines across the mouths of rivers that flow into the sea. Bays are defined as indentations between
headlands and bays headlands having an area greater than that of a semicircle. If they do not exceed 24 nautical miles (44 km) between headlands then they are internal waters; if their entrance is wider, then that portion landward of a 24 nautical mile straight line that touches opposite low-water marks across the bay positioned to contain the greatest water area are internal waters. All archipelagic waters within the outermost islands of an archipelagic state like
Indonesia or the
Philippines are also considered internal waters.
Control over a '''contiguous zone''' an additional 12 nautical miles beyond its 12 nautical mile territorial sea (totaling 24 miles from shore) is permitted by a coastal nation to "prevent infringement of its customs, fiscal, immigration or sanitary laws and regulations", which the
United States invoked on
24 September 1999 [http://clinton4.nara.gov/CEQ/990902a.html]. Thus a coastal nation has total control over its internal waters, slightly less control over territorial waters, ostensibly even less control over waters within the contiguous zone, and supposedly no control whatsoever over an ocean beyond them (although it also has some rights concerning resources within its
exclusive economic zone).
Territorial waters claimed by one state are often disputed by another state. Territorial waters have often been subject to arbitrary extension in order to encompass activities such as offshore
oil exploration, fishing rights (see
Cod War) and to prevent
pirate radio broadcasting from artificial marine fixtures and anchored ships.
From the
eighteenth century until the mid
twentieth century, the territorial waters of the
British Empire, the United States,
France and many other nations were three nautical miles (6 km) wide. Originally, this was the length of a
cannon shot, hence the portion of an ocean that a sovereign state could defend from shore. However,
Iceland claimed two nautical miles (4 km),
Norway claimed four nautical miles (7 km), and
Spain claimed six nautical miles (11 km) during this period. During incidents such as nuclear weapons testing and fisheries disputes some nations arbitrairly extended their maritime claims to as much as fifty or even two hundred nautical miles! Since the late 20th century the "12 mile limit" has become almost universally accepted. Britain extended her territorial waters from three to twelve nautical miles in 1987.
Throughout this page, the numbers of nautical miles are exact legal definitions, whereas the numbers of kilometres are only rough approximations which do not appear in any law or treaty.
See also
*
International waters
*
Exclusive economic zone
*
Internal waters
*
Sealand
External link
-
UN Convention on the Law of the Sea
Category:Law of the sea
Category:Human geography
da:Territorialfarvand
de:Hoheitsgewässer
es:Mar territorial
is:Landhelgi
he:מי×? טריטורי×?ליי×?
nl:Territoriale wateren
sv:Territorialvatten
vi:Lãnh hải
zh:领海
see
Territorial waters
*** Shopping-Tip: Territorial Waters