1. Introduction
For decades, the Hellenic Republic and the Republic of Turkey have been in dispute about maritime jurisdiction and other issues in the Aegean Sea. With the discovery of large hydrocarbon deposits in some parts of the Eastern Mediterranean, the relationship between the two states has become even more strained. As their continental shelf entitlements in the Eastern Mediterranean overlap to a significant extent, Greece and Turkey also clash over the reach of their sovereign rights and jurisdiction in this region. The disputed areas include the waters south and south-east of the islands of Rhodes, Karpathos, Kasos, and Crete. Footnote 1 Another hotspot of the conflict is the island of Kastellorizo (Megisti), Footnote 2 which is Greece’s most eastern outpost, Footnote 3 located about 330 nautical miles (nm) away from Piraeus and only 1.25 nm from the Turkish coast. Turkey asserts that its continental shelf extends directly to the outer limits of these islands’ 6-nm territorial sea. Footnote 4 In the view of the Greek government, Turkey tried ‘to usurp Greece’s ipso facto and ab initio sovereign rights over its continental shelf and to deprive the Greek islands of their maritime zones, in blatant violation of international law’. Footnote 5
For Turkey, hydrocarbon exploration in these disputed areas has become an important instrument to demonstrate power and exert pressure on Greece. The seismic survey operations conducted in such areas by the state-owned Petroleum Corporation TPAO are routinely escorted by Turkish Naval Forces. In August 2020, a Greek and a Turkish frigate clashed during a standoff in waters between Crete and Cyprus. Footnote 6 The collision happened when the Greek frigate approached the Oruç Reis, a research and survey vessel dispatched by Turkey to sectors where Greece and Turkey both claim continental shelf jurisdiction. Footnote 7 In the following months, the Oruç Reis conducted further seismic survey in a relatively large area, which included sectors close to Rhodes and Kastellorizo. In a letter to the UN Security Council, the Greek government expressed concern about ‘a major escalation of Turkish aggressive acts and rhetoric’ constituting ‘an open and unprecedented threat to Greece’s sovereignty and sovereign rights, as well as to the peace and stability of the broader region’. Footnote 8
Despite the resumption of bilateral exploratory talks in January 2021, relations between Greece and Turkey are still tense and a further escalation is possible. Such insecurity ties up enormous resources on both sides and hampers economic development of the entire region. Some analysts recently wrote that ‘the region remains one of the most under-explored and [under]-exploited in the world’ and that a key impediment to such exploration and exploitation was – in addition to the unresolved Cyprus issue – the lack of demarcated boundaries between the relevant countries. Footnote 9 Maritime boundaries, like land boundaries, must be stable, definitive, and determined with precision to allow for development and investment and to ensure a peaceful relationship between the states concerned. Footnote 10 This is all the more important where the resources of the continental shelf and EEZ are at stake. As the Eastern Mediterranean is a semi-enclosed and relatively narrow sea, it is impossible for the coastal states to exercise their continental shelf rights to a distance of 200 nm and establish an EEZ of equal breadth, as permitted by the international law of the sea, without coming into contact with the respective entitlements of other coastal states. Therefore, delimitation of overlapping continental shelves and EEZ areas is a pressing issue in the Eastern Mediterranean.
States in dispute over the boundary course between their continental shelves or EEZs may, on a consensual basis, request the ICJ, the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS), or an arbitral tribunal to effect delimitation. In the 1970s, Turkey refused the differences with Greece concerning the delimitation of the continental shelf in the Aegean to be settled by the ICJ. Footnote 11 However, the situation seems different today. In reaction to a call by Greek Prime Minister Mitsotakis at the 75th Session of the UN General Assembly to ‘trust the wisdom’ of the ICJ, if necessary, to settle the dispute in the Eastern Mediterranean, Footnote 12 Turkey evinced that it ‘does not rule out any peaceful means of settlement, including the Court’. Footnote 13
It would be an ambitious approach for Greece and Turkey to ask the ICJ to resolve all their maritime disputes in one process, which would include delimitation of the continental shelves in the Aegean and in the Eastern Mediterranean. The Court could then consider all relevant circumstances in a broader geographical context. However, as will be explained in more detail in the final section of this article, linking delimitation in the Eastern Mediterranean with the manifold unresolved Aegean issues would presumably overburden future talks and negotiations between the two parties and would make it difficult to achieve any progress. The present author therefore argues that Greece and Turkey should first concentrate on reaching an agreement to submit their current delimitation dispute in the Eastern Mediterranean to the ICJ. It would not be the first time that two states entrust the Court with delimiting their continental shelves and exclusive maritime zones only in a certain region. Footnote 14 From a geographical perspective, it is not too far-fetched to consider the Aegean and the Eastern Mediterranean as two connected but different theatres with different characteristics and to search – as far as the delimitation of maritime zones is concerned – for an equitable solution for each theatre. The southern limits of the Aegean Sea have been defined by the International Hydrographic Organization (IHO) as a line running in the form of a semi-circular arc from Cape Aspro in Turkey (Aspro-mitas, longitude 28°16’ E), Footnote 15 straight through the islands of Rhodes, Karpathos, and Crete, and through the islands of Antikithira and Kithira to the southeastern tip of the Peloponnese peninsula. Footnote 16 In the Aegean, the Turkish coast is fringed with numerous islands belonging to Greece, and the projection of the Turkish coast runs directly into these islands. In the Eastern Mediterranean, Rhodes and Kastellorizo are the only Greek islands located right in front of Turkey’s coast. At the same time, the eastward projection of Rhodes, Karpathos, Kasos, and Crete into the Eastern Mediterranean meets with the projection generated by Turkey’s southern coast in a much more open space (compared to the Aegean).
Against this background, this article focuses exclusively on the delimitation of the Greek and Turkish continental shelves and EEZs in the Eastern Mediterranean. The following analysis is divided into six parts (Sections 2–7). Section 2 provides an overview of Greece and Turkey’s colliding maritime claims and overlapping entitlements. The section also looks at the delimitation agreements the two parties concluded with other coastal states in the region. Section 3 outlines the legal arguments presented by Greece and Turkey to bolster their claims, and Section 4 elaborates on the applicable law. It starts with the method employed by the ICJ and international tribunals to delimit the continental shelf and/or EEZ. After that, the possible effect of islands on the delimitation will be examined in light of relevant jurisprudence. Section 5 explores what an equitable solution could actually look like in the present case. In particular, this section will discuss how the small island of Kastellorizo may be treated in the process. Section 6 sheds light on the economic and political implications of the case, and Section 7 concludes with an outlook.
2. The parties’ maritime claims and entitlements in the Eastern Mediterranean
Since the early 2000s, Turkey has shared co-ordinates with the UN to delineate the outer limits of its continental shelf in the Eastern Mediterranean:
In its objection to a delimitation agreement concluded by the Republic of Cyprus and Egypt in 2003, Footnote 17 the Turkish government claimed that delimitation in areas west of longitude 32°16’18’’E, which runs just outside of Cyprus’s western territorial sea, concerned Turkey’s ipso facto and ab initio legal and sovereign rights. Footnote 18 According to Ankara, the outer limits of Turkey’s continental shelf in these areas followed the median line between the Turkish and Egyptian coastlines. Footnote 19
In 2011, Turkey signed its first continental shelf delimitation agreement in the Eastern Mediterranean, which was an agreement with the ‘Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus’ (TRNC). Footnote 20 The TRNC was established in violation of international law. Footnote 21 It is a de facto regime recognized only by Turkey and does not qualify as a state. As a consequence, the agreement is not valid under international law.
On 13 November 2019, Turkey submitted to the UN Secretary-General a consolidated list of geographical co-ordinates to determine the outer limits of its continental shelf in the Eastern Mediterranean. Footnote 22
On 27 November 2019, Turkey signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with Libya. Footnote 23 In the MoU, the boundaries of the continental shelves and EEZs between both countries are defined by a single line. Footnote 24 In February 2020, Turkey conveyed to the UN Secretary-General the geographical co-ordinates listed in the MoU. Footnote 25
On 18 March 2020, Turkey submitted a chart to the UN depicting the outer limits of its continental shelf in the Eastern Mediterranean as delineated so far (see Figure 1). Footnote 26
Greece restated through national legislation that it has a continental shelf, ipso facto and ab initio, to a distance of 200 nm from the baselines from which the breadth of its territorial sea is measured. Footnote 27 This implies that Greece asserts a continental shelf also for its islands in the Eastern Mediterranean, which include Rhodes, Karpathos, Kasos, and Crete, as well as Kastellorizo. Footnote 28 Moreover, Greece has announced that it pursued a strategy of entering into delimitation agreements with all its neighbours. Footnote 29
Neither Greece nor Turkey have unilaterally declared an EEZ in the Eastern Mediterranean. However, the conclusion of an EEZ delimitation agreement by a coastal state which has not yet declared an EEZ might be equivalent to a unilateral proclamation of the EEZ to the extent that the co-ordinates of the delimitation line are given due publicity and are deposited with the UN Secretary-General. Footnote 30
Greece’s first and so-far only EEZ agreement for the Eastern Mediterranean is the one with Egypt of 6 August 2020. Footnote 31 The partial delimitation line established in the agreement is defined by five points Footnote 32 and is more or less an equidistance line (measured on the Greek side from Rhodes and the other islands south of it, and on the Egyptian side from the mainland coast). According to international law experts familiar with the negotiations, the resulting maritime area allocated to each state was at a ratio of about 9:11 favouring Egypt. Footnote 33 The delimitation line established in the agreement is considered binding and final by the parties. Footnote 34 But the agreement provides that, in case of future delimitation of the EEZ with other neighbouring states, the geographical co-ordinates of the two end points of the line may be reviewed by a further agreement between Greece and Egypt. Footnote 35
Reportedly, Greece and Egypt began negotiating their boundary delimitation in the early 2000s. Footnote 36 However, the signing of the MoU between Turkey and Libya in 2019 prompted Greece to push for the agreement with Egypt to be finalized as quickly as possible. The boundary agreed between Turkey and Libya lies in an area south-east of Crete, which Greece deems to be part of its continental shelf. Greece therefore vehemently criticized and rejected the MoU, calling it ‘null and void’. Footnote 37 Athens argues that the MoU disregarded the presence of the Greek islands in the area and violated their right to generate maritime zones. Footnote 38 In particular, Greece complains that the MoU was aimed at cutting off the islands west of longitude 28°00’00’’E (which includes Rhodes, Karpathos, Kasos, and Crete) from the maritime areas into which their coasts projected. Footnote 39 Furthermore, Greece blames Turkey for disregarding the entitlements of its islands between longitudes 28°00’00’’E and 32°16’18’’E (which concerns the island group of Kastellorizo). Footnote 40 In general, Greece holds that Turkey and Libya had neither overlapping maritime zones nor common boundaries. Footnote 41 Consequently, in Greece’s view, there was no geographical and thus no legal basis for these states to conclude a maritime delimitation agreement. Footnote 42
Vice versa, Turkey immediately rejected the EEZ delimitation agreement of 6 August 2020 between Greece and Egypt. According to Ankara, this agreement was null and void with respect to Turkey because a maritime boundary between Greece and Egypt did not exist and the ‘supposedly-delimited’ area lay within the Turkish continental shelf. Footnote 43
3. The parties’ legal positions concerning delimitation and the effect of islands
At the heart of the dispute between Greece and Turkey concerning the reach of their sovereign rights and jurisdiction in the Eastern Mediterranean are two issues related to the delimitation of the continental shelf and EEZ: (i) what role do the Greek islands play in the delimitation of these maritime zones, and (ii) which method would apply in the delimitation? The following subsections summarize the legal views of both parties on these matters.
3.1 On the effect of the Greek islands
Greece firmly holds the position that all its islands, regardless of their size, are entitled to a continental shelf and an EEZ, as any land territory, and are to be accorded full effect when it comes to the delimitation of these maritime zones. Footnote 44 To substantiate its position, Greece refers to Article 121(2) of the 1982 UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (LOSC) Footnote 45 and to corresponding customary international law. Footnote 46
Turkey does not generally deny that islands may be entitled to maritime zones. Footnote 47 It maintains, however, that ‘there is no automaticity in claiming that islands generate full maritime jurisdiction areas’. Footnote 48 In Turkey’s view, ‘[i]slands are ignored or given limited effect in maritime boundary delimitation if their location distorts equitable delimitation or if there are other special/relevant circumstances’. Footnote 49 Regarding the role of the Greek islands in the delimitation of the continental shelf and EEZ, the Turkish government argues that the islands could not have a cut-off effect on Turkey’s coastal projection and that ‘islands which lie on the wrong side of the median line between two mainlands cannot create maritime jurisdiction areas beyond their territorial waters’. Footnote 50 During the Third UN Conference on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS III, 1973–1982), Turkey already stated that islands were not all of equal importance as some islands rested on the continental shelf of another state, thus producing a source of friction between the states concerned. Footnote 51 Hence, Turkey’s long-standing position is that islands should be treated as special or relevant circumstances in maritime delimitation. Footnote 52 Apart from that, Turkey emphasizes that it has the longest continental coastline in the Eastern Mediterranean and that length and direction of the coasts should also be considered in the delimitation of maritime jurisdiction areas. Footnote 53
In August 2020, the Turkish government specified its position with regard to the Greek island of Kastellorizo:
Furthermore, Greece’s objections to Oruç Reis’s activity lack any legal basis and completely ignore the relevant court decisions regarding the entitlement of islands lying on the wrong side of the median line between the mainlands not to generate a continental shelf/exclusive economic zone … Greece bases its claims regarding the area where Oruç Reis conducts hydrocarbon activities on the island of Kastellorizo. According to the claim, a 10 km2 island lying 2 km away from the Turkish mainland and 580 km away from the Greek mainland is supposed to create a 40,000 km2 continental shelf/exclusive economic zone area. This is in fact absurd and irrational, and contrary to international law … Yet the persistent Greek claim foresees full effect for Kastellorizo, whereas it could only be given territorial sea, but no continental shelf and exclusive economic zone, according to the jurisprudence of relevant international courts. Footnote 54
A few months later, Ankara reiterated:
Considering the dominating geographical circumstances in the relevant area, namely the overwhelming length of the Turkish coastline and the seaward projection thereof, the island of Kastellorizo could not be accorded maritime jurisdiction areas beyond territorial waters in accordance with the jurisprudence of international courts as well as the State practice in that respect. Footnote 55
3.2 On the method of delimitation
Greece’s long-standing position is that delimitation of the continental shelf and EEZ between states with opposite coasts – both continental and insular – ‘should take place in accordance with the pertinent rules of international law on the basis of the equidistance/median line principle’. Footnote 56 This position is reflected in Greece’s national legislation Footnote 57 and has been registered with the UN by the Greek government. Footnote 58 Greece argues that international courts and tribunals affirmed the central importance of the equidistance line in maritime delimitation in the application of LOSC Articles 74 and 83 and relevant customary international law. Footnote 59 LOSC Article 74(1) provides that delimitation of the EEZ between states with opposite or adjacent coasts ‘shall be effected by agreement on the basis of international law, as referred to in Article 38 of the Statute of the International Court of Justice, in order to achieve an equitable solution’. Article 83(1), which concerns the delimitation of the continental shelf, is formulated in identical terms.
In the absence of a delimitation agreement with Turkey, Greece regards the median line to mark the outer limit of its continental shelf and EEZ in relation to Turkey. Footnote 60 A map designed by Suárez de Vivero illustrates what a delimitation between Greece and Turkey on the basis of equidistance would look like if the Greek islands were given full effect in the delimitation. Footnote 61 The map, which is also known as the ‘Seville map’, has become a political issue and is heavily criticized by Turkey for being incompatible with the principle of equitable delimitation. Footnote 62
Turkey also refers to LOSC Articles 74 and 83. Contrary to its earlier position, Footnote 63 Turkey now considers these articles to reflect customary international law. Footnote 64 In Turkey’s view, however, it is of utmost importance ‘to produce an equitable result (principle of equity)’ when delimiting the continental shelf and EEZ between states with opposite or adjacent coasts. Footnote 65 Turkey maintains that delimitation in the Eastern Mediterranean should ‘be effected by agreement of all the related parties on the basis of the principle of equity so as not to prejudice the sovereign rights and jurisdiction of other interested States/entities’. Footnote 66 In such a process, all relevant or special circumstances had to be taken into account. Footnote 67 Whether a maritime delimitation line was equitable had to be assessed by a number of factors, including regional geography, configuration of the coasts, basepoints, the presence of islands and rocks, historical rights, and the presence of third states. Footnote 68 The equidistance/median line method, Turkey argues, was applied in state practice and international jurisprudence only when this did not distort equitable delimitation. Footnote 69 Notably, the 2019 MoU between Turkey and Libya establishes an equidistance line as the result of ‘a precise and equitable delimitation’, Footnote 70 and in relation to Egypt, Turkey also favours delimitation of the continental shelf by a median line. Footnote 71
4. Delimitation by judicial process: The applicable law
Given their fundamentally different positions, it is unlikely that Greece and Turkey will be able to effect delimitation of their continental shelves and EEZs in the Eastern Mediterranean by agreement. This is where the ICJ and international tribunals usually come into play. LOSC Articles 74(2) and 83(2) stipulate that the states concerned shall resort to the procedures provided for in LOSC Part XV on the settlement of disputes if no agreement can be reached in a reasonable timeframe. The ICJ in Nicaragua v. Colombia reaffirmed ‘that the principles of maritime delimitation enshrined in Articles 74 and 83 reflect customary international law’. Footnote 72 Some experts consequently argue that Articles 74 and 83 – in their entirety – were relevant to any delimitation of the EEZ and continental shelf, regardless of whether the states concerned were parties to the LOSC. Footnote 73 This means that Greece and Turkey were under an obligation rooted in customary international law, corresponding to Articles 74(2) and 83(2), to resort after a reasonable period of time to further dispute settlement mechanisms. In any case, they are under an obligation, according to Article 2(3) of the UN Charter, to settle their dispute ‘by peaceful means in such a manner that international peace and security, and justice, are not endangered’. However, neither LOSC Articles 74(2) and 83(2), nor Articles 2(3) and 33(1) of the UN Charter require states to use a specific means for settling a dispute. Footnote 74
The following two subsections address (i) the method employed by the ICJ and international tribunals when delimiting the continental shelf and/or EEZ, and (ii) the legal concepts and criteria developed in international jurisprudence to determine the effect of an island on the course of the delimitation line.
4.1 The applicable method: The three-stage approach
The ICJ has recognized that LOSC Articles 74(1) and 83(1) are an expression of customary international law. Footnote 75 However, the wording of these provisions is deliberately vague because delimitation of the EEZ and continental shelf was a highly controversial issue at UNCLOS III. The outcome was a compromise formula that establishes the objective of achieving an equitable solution but does not provide any guidance on the applicable method and rules to accomplish this goal. In Libya/Malta, the ICJ noted that the LOSC restricted itself to setting a standard, and it was left to states or the courts ‘to endow this standard with specific content’. Footnote 76 Over time, a certain methodology and some substantive rules for the judicial delimitation of the EEZ and continental shelf developed in international jurisprudence. In the 2009 Black Sea judgment, the ICJ introduced a three-stage approach, Footnote 77 which is regarded as the current standard. Footnote 78 Here, the Court outlined the elements of the test as follows:
First, the Court will establish a provisional delimitation line, using methods that are geometrically objective and also appropriate for the geography of the area in which the delimitation is to take place. So far as delimitation between adjacent coasts is concerned, an equidistance line will be drawn unless there are compelling reasons that make this unfeasible in the particular case … So far as opposite coasts are concerned, the provisional delimitation line will consist of a median line between the two coasts. No legal consequences flow from the use of the terms “median line” and “equidistance line” since the method of delimitation is the same for both. Footnote 79
The course of the final line should result in an equitable solution (Articles 74 and 83 of UNCLOS). Therefore, the Court will at the next, second stage consider whether there are factors calling for the adjustment or shifting of the provisional equidistance line in order to achieve an equitable result Footnote 80 … Such factors have usually been referred to in the jurisprudence of the Court … as the relevant circumstances. Footnote 81
Finally, and at a third stage, the Court will verify that the line (a provisional equidistance line which may or may not have been adjusted by taking into account the relevant circumstances) does not, as it stands, lead to an inequitable result by reason of any marked disproportion between the ratio of the respective coastal lengths and the ratio between the relevant maritime area of each State by reference to the delimitation line. Footnote 82
In addition, two preliminary issues are regularly addressed before establishing the provisional delimitation line. First, the relevant coasts need to be identified. To be relevant for delimitation, a coast must generate projections in the seaward direction that overlap with projections from the coast of the other party. Footnote 83 Second, the relevant maritime area must be determined, which ‘comprises that part of the maritime space in which the potential entitlements of the parties overlap’. Footnote 84
On one hand, the rationale behind the three-stage approach is to ensure objectivity and predictability. Footnote 85 On the other hand, the approach is supposed to guarantee sufficient flexibility for achieving an equitable solution. However, as an evaluation of the case law suggests, it is questionable whether the approach and its application actually meet the expectation of providing predictability. Footnote 86 A considerable degree of uncertainty exists, especially on the treatment of islands in the delimitation process. The ICJ and international tribunals have not yet developed a clear and coherent set of rules and standards for determining the effect of an island on the delimitation of the continental shelf and EEZ.
4.2 Islands and delimitation: Why the outcome of the process would be difficult to predict
In the logic of the three-stage approach, islands may find consideration at two stages of the delimitation process: first, as locations for basepoints in the construction of the provisional equidistance/median line; and second, as relevant circumstances calling for the adjustment or shifting of that line. At both stages, the treatment of islands has produced uncertainty. Driven by considerations of equity, the ICJ and international tribunals sometimes discard certain basepoints located on islands at the first stage of the delimitation process. Footnote 87 This makes the construction of the provisional equidistance/median line a subjective and unpredictable undertaking.
Even greater uncertainty exists with regard to determining an island’s relevance at the second stage of the delimitation process. In some cases, islands are given full or partial effect in controlling the course of the final delimitation line, but in other cases they are deemed irrelevant for the purpose of delimitation, and in still other cases more differentiated solutions have been found. Footnote 88 Often, several relevant circumstances are considered in conjunction, which makes it difficult to reproduce the effect of each circumstance on the adjustment or shifting of the boundary. Moreover, the legal effect of a particular island may vary from case to case. Footnote 89 As the ITLOS observed in Bangladesh/Myanmar:
[T]he effect to be given to an island … depends on the geographic realities and the circumstances of the specific case. There is no general rule in this respect. Each case is unique and requires specific treatment, the ultimate goal being to reach a solution that is equitable. Footnote 90
The ICJ and international tribunals tend to make a difference between mainland coasts and islands when delimiting the continental shelf and/or EEZ. In Libya/Malta, for instance, the ICJ decided to shift the provisional median line between Malta and the Libyan mainland significantly towards Malta to produce an equitable result. Here, the Court accounted for several relevant circumstances, including the general geographical context (in which the island of Malta appeared to the Court as a relatively small feature in a semi-enclosed sea) and the great disparity in the lengths of the relevant coasts. Footnote 91 Nicaragua v. Colombia is another example, as the ICJ decided not to treat the Colombian islands ‘as though they were a continuous mainland coast’. Footnote 92 Such judgments suggest that it is appropriate to differentiate, in terms of delimitation, between mainland coasts and islands irrespective of LOSC Article 121(2) and customary international law, Footnote 93 which provide that islands enjoy the same status and generate the same maritime rights as any land territory. Evans notes that, ‘despite their equal generative capacity, islands are rarely treated equally with mainland coasts within the delimitation process’. Footnote 94 The problem is that the ICJ and international tribunals have not clearly explained why and under which conditions they consider this differentiation to be appropriate. It is therefore difficult to understand the rationale behind individual decisions in which islands are treated differently. Such discretion leads to uncertainty. Footnote 95 To determine the effect of an island at the second stage of the delimitation, the ICJ and international tribunals usually refer to the following concepts and criteria, which all relate to geography.
4.2.1 Length of the coasts
According to the ICJ’s long-standing jurisprudence, a substantial difference in the lengths of the parties’ coastlines may be a factor to be taken into account. A significant disparity generally calls for shifting the provisional equidistance or median line towards the state with the shorter coastline. Footnote 96
4.2.2 Size of an island
The ICJ expressed in various cases that the size of an island matters in terms of delimitation. Footnote 97 From these rulings, the ICJ does not take account of very small islands or give them their full potential entitlement to maritime zones if this would have a disproportionate effect on the course of the delimitation line under consideration. Footnote 98
4.2.3 Cut-off
Moreover, the ICJ and international tribunals have ruled that cut-off effects caused by an island (in different geographical constellations, including situations of both adjacent and opposite coasts) can be a relevant circumstance. Footnote 99 In Nicaragua v. Colombia, the ICJ expounded that an equitable solution required the delimitation line to allow the coasts of both parties, as far as possible, ‘to produce their effects in terms of maritime entitlements in a reasonable and mutually balanced way’. Footnote 100 The Court also stressed that an adjustment made to remedy an inequitable cut-off to the detriment of one state must not create an inequitable cut-off to the detriment of the other state. Footnote 101 In other words, cutting the parties off from the maritime spaces into which their coasts projected had to be avoided as far as possible. Footnote 102 To eliminate undue cut-off effects, the ICJ and international tribunals sometimes combine different techniques, such as corridors and enclaving. Footnote 103
4.2.4 Islands ‘on the wrong side’ of the median line
Where the island of one state is located ‘on the wrong side’ of an equidistance or median line, close to the coast of the other state, it is common among states to draw an arc of a determinate distance around the island. Footnote 104 By enclosing an island in an enclave, it can be avoided that the island will have a distorting effect on the equidistance or median line. At the same time, such a solution may be used to accord the island a limited continental shelf and EEZ belt of a few nautical miles. The classic example in international jurisprudence is the 1977 decision of the Court of Arbitration regarding the Channel Islands in the Anglo-French Continental Shelf case. Footnote 105
All in all, the ICJ and international tribunals exercise considerable discretion in deciding whether an island in a particular setting qualifies as a relevant circumstance calling for the adjustment or shifting of a provisional delimitation line. Relevant circumstances are ‘case specific’ Footnote 106 and there are various techniques that allow for relevant circumstances to be considered for an equitable result. Footnote 107 Practice has shown that complex cases have prompted the ICJ and international tribunals to adopt a more results-oriented approach and search for creative solutions. A high degree of flexibility may be necessary to cope with all kinds of geographical settings and find an equitable solution for each case. However, the more flexibility exercised in the treatment of islands at the second stage of the delimitation process, the more difficult it becomes to identify consistent patterns concerning these matters in case law. While the ICJ and international tribunals occasionally spend some time to explain their decisions, it would take a more concerted and systematic effort for them to conceptualize their reasoning. To conclude, the ICJ and international tribunals have developed a methodological framework for the delimitation of the continental shelf and EEZ, but there is much room and flexibility within this framework for tailoring equitable solutions. This makes it hard to anticipate the outcome of a particular process.
5. Searching for an equitable solution in the present case
This section provides ideas on how to achieve an equitable solution in a judicial process between Greece and Turkey concerning the delimitation of their continental shelves and EEZs in the Eastern Mediterranean. To this end, two dominating geographical characteristics are addressed: (i) the presence of several large Greek islands – Rhodes, Karpathos, and Crete (plus Kasos) – whose projection into the Eastern Mediterranean overlaps with the projection of Turkey’s southern coast for the most part in a relatively open space (compared to the area of overlapping entitlements in the Aegean), and (ii) the solitary location of the small Greek island of Kastellorizo, which is wholly detached geographically from the Greek mainland and situated directly in front of the Turkish coast.
5.1 Rhodes, Karpathos, Kasos, and Crete
Rhodes, Karpathos, Kasos, and Crete form an arcuate chain that virtually marks the boundary or bridge between the Aegean and the Eastern Mediterranean. One might say that these islands are Greece’s window into the Eastern Mediterranean. In this sense, the four islands present themselves as a geographical unit. The two dominating islands of the chain, Rhodes and Crete, have a considerable size of approximately 1.400 km2 and 8.300 km2 respectively, and are home to large populations. The distances between the neighbouring islands of the chain range from about 3 to 30 nm.
For the purpose of delimitation, it is appropriate to start with drawing a provisional equidistance line between this chain of islands and the relevant Turkish coast. Before construing this line, the parties’ relevant coasts must be determined. On the Greek side, the relevant coast would consist of those segments of the four islands’ coasts that project into the Eastern Mediterranean. Footnote 108 On the Turkish side, the starting point of the relevant coast in the west could be Cape Aspro-mitas, which has been identified by the IHO as one of the two terminal points of the line defining the southern limit of the Aegean. Footnote 109 Towards the east, the entire Turkish coast appears to be relevant. As the ICJ explained, maritime entitlements are generated through ‘coastal projections in the seaward direction’. Footnote 110 In order to be relevant for the purpose of delimitation, a coast ‘must generate projections which overlap with projections from the coast of the other Party’. Footnote 111 Accordingly, each part of a coast that generates an overlapping entitlement by its seaward extension should be relevant. Footnote 112 The terminus of the relevant coast would be the point ‘beyond which the coast in question no longer has a relationship with the coast of the other Party relevant for … delimitation’. Footnote 113 It may be argued that coastal projection in the ‘seaward’ direction does not necessarily mean ‘frontal’ projection Footnote 114 Rather, the term ‘seaward’ can also be understood as an omni-directional, radial projection. Footnote 115 Technically, this entails that a series of arcs with a radius of 200 nm (for the EEZ and distance-based continental shelf) will be drawn from established basepoints along the coast of each party to determine the reach of the parties’ entitlements (envelope-of-arcs method). The ICJ and international tribunals usually apply this method without making explicit reference to it. Footnote 116 In Somalia v. Kenya, however, the ICJ clearly stated that it identified the relevant coasts by using radial projections that overlap within 200 nm. Footnote 117 Applying the envelope-of-arcs method in the present case suggests that even the easternmost point of Turkey’s coast contributes to generating an entitlement that overlaps with the entitlement generated by the Greek islands (more precisely with that part of the entitlement which is generated by the coast of Rhodes). That the Republic of Cyprus or other states may also have entitlements in the area where Greece’s and Turkey’s entitlements overlap does not preclude the inclusion of those parts when determining the relevant area for the purpose of effecting delimitation between Greece and Turkey. Footnote 118
After identifying the relevant coasts and relevant area, the provisional equidistance line between the four Greek islands and the Turkish coast could be construed by using the parties’ lawfully established baselines as a reference (which would include normal baselines as well as straight baselines with their basepoints, where applicable). This would be an objective way of implementing the first stage of the three-stage approach. Alternatively, one could also select along the relevant coasts certain basepoints that appear ‘appropriate’ in light of the specific coastal geography. This would already require a subjective assessment at the first stage of the process. The ICJ and international tribunals often prefer the latter option. Footnote 119
At the second stage of the three-stage process, it is necessary to take account of certain relevant circumstances. The presence of Rhodes in front of the Turkish coast will produce a cut-off effect hindering the Turkish coast to unfold its full continental shelf entitlement, but such cut-off effects, which are to some degree inherent in every delimitation, Footnote 120 warrant a shifting of the provisional equidistance or median line only if the effect is serious enough. Footnote 121
More importantly, Turkey’s relevant coast in the Eastern Mediterranean is significantly longer than that of the four Greek islands. In general, the boundary should be drawn so that the portion of the relevant area accorded to each state gives consideration to the disparity between the lengths of their relevant coasts. Footnote 122 In Nicaragua v. Colombia, for example, the ICJ considered a ratio of approximately 1:8.2 as requiring an adjustment of the provisional median line. Footnote 123 While a more precise calculation would be necessary in the present case, it is fair to assume that the length disparity between Greece’s and Turkey’s relevant coasts in the Eastern Mediterranean is so substantial that the provisional equidistance line would have to shift towards the four Greek islands to arrive at an equitable solution. Yet, the more difficult question is how Kastellorizo can be included in such a solution.
5.2 Kastellorizo
Kastellorizo is entitled to a continental shelf and may generate an EEZ as any other island or land territory, but when it comes to delimitation, Kastellorizo’s effect should be limited compared to the effect produced by the four larger Greek islands in the Eastern Mediterranean (comprising Rhodes, Karpathos, Kasos, and Crete). Unlike these islands, Kastellorizo – from a geographical perspective – appears to be part of the configuration of the Turkish coast. It is situated entirely within Turkey’s territorial sea and may even rest on the same geological shelf as the Turkish mainland. However, geological and geomorphological considerations are not considered by the ICJ and international tribunals in the delimitation of overlapping entitlements within 200 nm of the parties’ coasts. Footnote 124
Turkey considers it a relevant circumstance that Kastellorizo is located several hundred kilometres away from the Greek mainland. According to Turkey, the ‘maritime jurisdiction areas’ generated by the island should therefore be constricted to its territorial waters. In the Jan Mayen case, Denmark emphasized that the Norwegian island of Jan Mayen was totally detached from Norway and close to Greenland. Footnote 125 In Denmark’s perception, Jan Mayen fell:
… into the category of islands which may be depicted as detached islands in the sense of islands lying so far from their parent mainland that they are situated on the “wrong side” of an equidistance line measured between the respective mainlands. Footnote 126
Even so, the ICJ ruled that ‘[t]he coast of Jan Mayen, no less than that of eastern Greenland, generates potential title to the maritime areas recognized by customary law, i.e., in principle up to a limit of 200 miles from its baselines’. Footnote 127
Kastellorizo is also of very small size. In Costa Rica v. Nicaragua, the ICJ found that Nicaragua’s Corn Islands, given their limited size of 12.6 km2 and significant distance from the mainland coast, could be accorded only half effect, which produced an adjustment of the equidistance line in favour of Costa Rica. Footnote 128 In terms of size, the insular group of Kastellorizo, which, as a municipality, has a size of about 12 km2, is comparable to the Corn Islands.
If an adjusted equidistance line is drawn between the chain of the four Greek islands and the Turkish coast, as described in the previous subsection, the island of Kastellorizo would indeed be positioned on the wrong side of that line. Moreover, Kastellorizo, despite its small size, could produce a significant cut-off effect on Turkey’s coastal projection if given full weight in the delimitation. On the one hand, Turkey must be protected from serious disadvantages that could lead to an inequitable solution. On the other hand, Kastellorizo must not be excessively affected by a reverse cut-off effect. As a matter of principle, the mutual encroachment and cut-off effects must be distributed in a balanced and reasonable manner. Footnote 129 Simply denying the island any portion of a continental shelf and EEZ, which reflects Turkey’s position, would not lead to an equitable solution.
First of all, it would be necessary to delimit Kastellorizo’s territorial sea from the territorial sea generated by Turkey’s opposite coast. This would require drawing a median line in accordance with customary international law corresponding to LOSC Article 15. South of the median line, Kastellorizo’s territorial sea would form an arc-shaped envelope extending to 6 nm in each direction. This envelope would surround the entire island group of Kastellorizo, including smaller islets, which qualify as rocks under LOSC Article 121(3).
As far as the delimitation of the continental shelf and EEZ is concerned, different options are conceivable. One option is enclaving Kastellorizo based on radial projection. It would grant Kastellorizo a small continental shelf and EEZ belt of a few nautical miles, perhaps an additional 3 to 6 nm. This belt would also take shape of an envelope of arcs surrounding the island to the east, west, and south, but not encroaching upon Turkey’s territorial sea in the north where the median line is drawn. The smaller islets of the island group of Kastellorizo, to the extent that they are rocks within the meaning of LOSC Article 121(3), are not entitled to a continental shelf and to an EEZ. Accordingly, they are not to be factored into the calculation when drawing the enclave delimitation line for the continental shelf and EEZ.
A second option is to use the maritime space available to the south of Kastellorizo and aim for a corridor solution instead of an enlarged enclave around the island. Such a solution would be based on the concept of frontal projection, which implies that coasts project only in the direction they face, i.e., perpendicular to the general direction of the coastal front. Footnote 130 As the general direction of Kastellorizo’s southward coastal front runs diagonally from northeast to southwest, applying the concept of frontal projection in a strict manner would mean the corridor extends diagonally to the southeast. However, a corridor running due south with parallel straight lines perpendicular to the latitude that crosses the island (as if the general direction of the coastal front would exactly follow an east-west axis) would be preferable to avoid any further encroachment upon Turkey’s continental shelf and EEZ projection to the south. Compared to the first option (which is enclaving the island), such a corridor solution also significantly reduces cut-off for Turkey while giving Kastellorizo a greater share of the area for its continental shelf and EEZ. The east-west extension of the corridor would correspond to the island’s east-west extension, but its breadth could theoretically extend up to 200 nm. Where the corridor would overlap with the entitlements of third states, further delimitation with these states would be necessary.
5.3 The relevance of existing boundary agreements with third states
Another issue that could arise in a future delimitation process between Greece and Turkey concerns the relevance of boundary agreements which each party individually concluded with other coastal states in the region. In a judicial process, the Turkish government might argue that the 2019 MoU with Libya amounted to Libya’s recognition that the area on the Turkish side of the agreed delimitation line appertained to Turkey. Such an argument would aim at excluding this particular space from the relevant area to be delimited by the Court. Footnote 131 In Nicaragua v. Colombia, however, the ICJ made clear it was not required to account for an agreement concluded by one of the parties with a third state. Footnote 132 The Court referenced the fundamental principle of international law that a treaty between two states cannot, by itself, affect the rights of another state. Footnote 133 This principle is codified in Article 34 of the 1969 Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties. Footnote 134 Accordingly, the 2019 MoU with Libya does not confer upon Turkey any rights against Greece. In particular, the MoU cannot give Turkey, vis-à-vis Greece, a greater share of the area in which its entitlements overlap with those of Greece.
Moreover, the 2019 MoU would not limit the ICJ in a sense that it must respect the entitlements of Libya when drawing the boundary between the Greek and Turkish continental shelf and EEZ. Pursuant to Article 59 of the ICJ Statute, the Court’s decision has no binding force except between the parties and in respect of that particular case. Accordingly, a judgment on delimitation is without prejudice to any claims of third states in the region Footnote 135 even if their entitlements overlap with those of the parties to the case. Nevertheless, the ICJ usually takes care not to draw a boundary line into areas where the rights of third states might be affected. Footnote 136 In a future delimitation process between Greece and Turkey, the Court would probably not fix the endpoints of the delimitation line between both parties where third states such as Cyprus, Egypt, or Libya may also have maritime entitlements. Footnote 137
6. Economic and political implications
Until now, no large natural gas deposits were discovered in the disputed area between Greece and Turkey in the Eastern Mediterranean. A study by the US Geological Survey estimates that the Mediterranean Ridge Reservoirs (which include the disputed area east of the four Greek islands and south of Kastellorizo) are likely to hold less gas fields, which are significantly smaller than the reservoirs of the Herodotus Basin, the Eratosthenes Platform, the Nile Delta Basin, and the Levantine Basin (all located east of the Mediterranean Ridge Reservoirs). Footnote 138 Hence, in terms of a possible ‘gas bonanza’, the setting is entirely different from the competitive situation in the waters south of Cyprus or off the coasts of Israel and Egypt, where enormous reserves have been unlocked.
It would be too simplistic to describe the recent confrontation between Greece and Turkey in the Eastern Mediterranean as an aggressive race for potential gas resources. Obviously, the conflict is more fundamental in nature. It is rooted in an old rivalry, which deeply affects the national security interests of both states, and it is fuelled by increasing mutual mistrust. Greece thinks it must protect its sovereign rights and jurisdiction, and even its sovereignty, against Turkey’s expansive maritime claims. As far as Turkey is concerned, some experts observed a significant shift from its soft-power policy of the early 2010s to an ‘overtly confrontational foreign policy … on numerous fronts’. Footnote 139 The ‘Blue Homeland’ doctrine (Mavi Vatan), which reflects this confrontational position within the Turkish security community, has gained considerable support in Ankara. Although the doctrine appears to be a somewhat nebulous concept, Footnote 140 it conveys the impression that Turkey is under considerable outside pressure and must fend off interference with its national interests. At the same time, the doctrine envisages Turkey to expand its influence in the region. In particular, the doctrine rests on the presumption, as suggested by some experts, that naval supremacy was necessary ‘to thwart attempts by Greece and Cyprus to control the seas surrounding Turkey with the backing of the transatlantic alliance’. Footnote 141 It would be a far-reaching step for Turkey to entrust an international court with drawing boundaries in an area it considers to be part of its ‘Blue Homeland’.
Apart from that, the maritime dispute between Greece and Turkey is likely to gain additional momentum as the Eastern Mediterranean is about to become an important transit space for electricity. One of the EU’s flagship projects in the region is the EuroAsia Interconnector, a 2,000MW electricity highway connecting the national electricity grids of Israel, Cyprus, and Greece through a 1,208 km subsea cable. The other key project is the EuroAfrica Interconnector, which will connect the electricity grids of Egypt, Cyprus, and Greece through a 1,396 km subsea cable. The two interconnectors are to supply the EU with electricity produced by the gas reserves of Cyprus, Egypt, and Israel, as well as from renewable energy sources. The project’s visual documentation indicates that the envisaged cable route from Cyprus to Crete runs through the area regarded by Turkey as part of its continental shelf. Footnote 142 The lowest subsea point of the cable will be 3,000 metres below sea-level. As reported by several newspapers, Ankara already sent diplomatic notes to the Greek and Israeli embassies and the EU delegation demanding they must seek Turkey’s permission before conducting any work on its continental shelf. Footnote 143
7. Outlook
It is uncertain whether Greece and Turkey will find their way to the ICJ. Between 2002 and 2016, the two states held 60 rounds of informal exploratory talks to create a basis for full negotiations, especially concerning issues related to the situation in the Aegean. In January 2021, almost five years after Greece had suspended the meetings, Ankara and Athens revived the format in light of recent confrontations in the Eastern Mediterranean. On this occasion, the Greek government stated that restarting the exploratory talks process ‘will provide both sides the opportunity to explore the ground in order to proceed later on to meaningful and good-faith negotiations’ regarding the delimitation of their continental shelves and EEZs, ‘failing which, the two countries should agree to the judicial settlement of their dispute’. Footnote 144 Referring the dispute to the ICJ requires the parties to conclude a special agreement specifying, among other things, questions to be addressed by the Court. The Greek government made clear that the only outstanding difference with Turkey, which it would pursue, was the delimitation of the continental shelf and EEZ. Footnote 145
The Turkish government, while stating it did not rule out any means of peaceful settlement, including the ICJ, left no doubt that referral to the Court required mutual consent and that there first had to be an agreement on the issues taken to the Court. Footnote 146 Ankara also stressed that the outstanding issues to be addressed in the exploratory talks encompassed more than the continental shelf dispute. Footnote 147 In Turkey’s view, the issues constituted a comprehensive package, Footnote 148 and Turkey underlined its ‘readiness and full support for ensuring a just, equitable and peaceful solution to all pending issues’. Footnote 149 However, linking talks on the delimitation of maritime zones in the Eastern Mediterranean with unresolved problems on the Aegean will probably overburden future negotiations.
Ankara and Athens should use further rounds of discussion to show willingness to compromise and build mutual trust, but signals are pointing in the opposite direction. In July 2021, Turkey accused Greece of being ‘in material breach of its demilitarization obligations’ as far as several islands in the Eastern Aegean were concerned. Footnote 150 In particular, Turkey asserted that Greece was violating the treaties under which it had acquired sovereignty over these islands, which, from a legal point of view, meant that Greece could not, vis-à-vis Turkey, rely on its title under the same treaties for the purposes of maritime boundary delimitation. Footnote 151 The question of the islands’ demilitarization and other Aegean issues have continuously strained the relationship between Greece and Turkey. It is not to be expected that both states will move forward on these issues in the foreseeable future. At the same time, any further escalation of the Greek-Turkish battle over maritime zones in the Eastern Mediterranean would pose a serious threat to regional stability and security. This is why Ankara and Athens should now concentrate on reaching an agreement to submit their delimitation dispute to the ICJ.