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Energy from the sea : an international law perspective on ocean energy / edited by Nigel Bankes, Seline Trevisanut.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Leiden ; Boston : Brill Nijhoff, [2015]Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9004303529
  • 9789004303522
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Energy from the Sea : An International Law Perspective on Ocean Energy.DDC classification:
  • 343.0924
LOC classification:
  • K3997.A6 -- E547 2015eb
Online resources:
Contents:
Contents -- Energy from the Sea: Introduction -- Chapter 1 Energy Sovereignty in Marine Spaces -- Chapter 2 Mind the Gap in the GAIRS: The Role of Other Instruments in LOSC Regime Implementation in the Offshore Energy Sector -- Chapter 3 Energy from the Sea and the Protection of the Marine Environment: Treaty-Based Regimes and Ocean Corporate Social Responsibility -- Chapter 4 The Role of Private Actors in Offshore Energy: Shifting Models of Participation -- Chapter 5 Recent Framework Agreements for the Recognition and Development of Transboundary Hydrocarbon Resources
Chapter 6 Harnessing Offshore Wind Energy: Legal Challenges and Policy Conundrums in the European UnionChapter 7 Regulating Offshore Energy Sources in the North Sea�a�"Reinventing the Wheel or a Need for More Coordination? -- Index
Summary: One of the main challenges of our time is to be able to guarantee energy supply at a reasonable price. Policy makers, international institutions and the private sector increasingly look to the oceans as a significant source of energy. The Law of the Sea provides the legal framework within which any maritime activity is performed and strikes a balance between the multiple activities that can take place simultaneously in the same maritime zone. This volume addresses some of the main legal challenges raised by the expansion of the ocean energy sector and its consequences for the relevant international normative and institutional framework. Some of the major themes explored include energy sources and the competition for marine space, energy security, private actors and corporate social responsibility, fragmentation or integration, evolution and reinforcement of international law and liability.
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Title from content provider.

"Originally published as Volume 29, No. 4 (2014) of Brill's journal International journal of marine and coastal law"--Title page verso.

Contents -- Energy from the Sea: Introduction -- Chapter 1 Energy Sovereignty in Marine Spaces -- Chapter 2 Mind the Gap in the GAIRS: The Role of Other Instruments in LOSC Regime Implementation in the Offshore Energy Sector -- Chapter 3 Energy from the Sea and the Protection of the Marine Environment: Treaty-Based Regimes and Ocean Corporate Social Responsibility -- Chapter 4 The Role of Private Actors in Offshore Energy: Shifting Models of Participation -- Chapter 5 Recent Framework Agreements for the Recognition and Development of Transboundary Hydrocarbon Resources

Chapter 6 Harnessing Offshore Wind Energy: Legal Challenges and Policy Conundrums in the European UnionChapter 7 Regulating Offshore Energy Sources in the North Sea�a�"Reinventing the Wheel or a Need for More Coordination? -- Index

One of the main challenges of our time is to be able to guarantee energy supply at a reasonable price. Policy makers, international institutions and the private sector increasingly look to the oceans as a significant source of energy. The Law of the Sea provides the legal framework within which any maritime activity is performed and strikes a balance between the multiple activities that can take place simultaneously in the same maritime zone. This volume addresses some of the main legal challenges raised by the expansion of the ocean energy sector and its consequences for the relevant international normative and institutional framework. Some of the major themes explored include energy sources and the competition for marine space, energy security, private actors and corporate social responsibility, fragmentation or integration, evolution and reinforcement of international law and liability.

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