Netherlands boundaries in the North Sea
The maritime boundaries in the North Sea are laid down in treaties with Belgium, Germany and the United Kingdom. In addition, there are zones such as the Continental Shelf and the zones of the European common fisheries policy. All boundaries, limits and zones are listed below and in the National Georegistry.
Areas in the territorial sea
In addition to the maritime zones under UNCLOS, there are other maritime areas in the Netherlands territorial sea that depend on the baseline. They are the following:
- the zones of the European common fisheries policy.
Within these waters, EU Member States may enforce catch restrictions. The Netherlands allows Belgian, Danish and German ships to fish in the waters between 3 and 12 miles off the Dutch coast. French fishery vessels are allowed to fish between 6 and 12 miles off the coast. And British vessels are allowed to fish between Texel and the boundary with Germany. - the Particularly Sensitive Sea Area (PSSA) Wadden Sea.
In 2002, the International Maritime Organisation (IMO) designated the Wadden Sea as a PSSA sea. The outer limit of the Dutch part of this protected area is the 3-mile line. - the Coastal Waters according to the European Water Framework Directive.
The Water Framework Directive applies a zone of 1 mile (1.852 metre) off the coast. This zone represents the limit of the basins of the Ems, Rhine, Meuse and Scheldt rivers.
Figure: division of the North Sea into maritime zones.
Boundary treaties with Belgium, Germany and the United Kingdom
The maritime boundaries of the Netherlands in the North Sea are laid down in treaties with Belgium, Germany and the United Kingdom.
Maritime boundary with Belgium
The maritime boundary with Belgium is laid down in two treaties: one for the territorial sea and one for the Continental Shelf.
Maritime boundary with Germany
The maritime boundary with Germany for the Continental Shelf is laid down in two treaties: one for the Continental Shelf near the coast, and one for further offshore.
The Netherlands and Germany have not yet agreed on the boundary of the territorial sea near the Ems estuary. Yet, there is a treaty with agreements on cooperation: the Ems-Dollard Treaty. A supplementary agreement has been added to this treaty. It only deals with the exploration and exploitation of oil and gas. The borders of the treaty and the Supplementary Agreement do not match.
Figures: Relevant claimsand treaties in the Eems-Dollard estuary; annex to the Eems-Dollard Treaty; annex to the Supplementary Agreement.
Maritime boundary with the United Kingdom
The maritime boundary with the United Kingdom is also laid down in a treaty. It was amended twice, due to the connection of the boundaries with Germany and Belgium.
Act | Geographic cope | Year | Geodetic datum |
---|---|---|---|
Ems-Dollard Treaty | Netherlands |
1960 | Potsdamer Datum |
Netherlands | 1962 | Potsdamer Datum | |
Netherlands | 1964 | Potsdamer Datum | |
Netherlands | 1965, amended in 1971 |
ED50 | |
Netherlands | 1971 | ED50 | |
Netherlands Territorial Sea (Demarcation) Act |
Netherlands |
1985 |
ED50 |
Treaty between the Kingdom of the Netherlands and the Kingdom of Belgium on the delimitation of the Territorial Sea | Netherlands |
1996 |
ED50 |
Treaty between the Kingdom of the Netherlands and the Kingdom of Belgium on the delimitation of the Continental Shelf |
Netherlands |
1996 |
ED50 |
Exclusive Economic Zone (Establishment) Act | Kingdom | 1999 |
|
Exclusive Economic Zone of the Netherlands (Outer Limits) Decree |
Netherlands | 2000 |
|
Mining Act | Netherlands | 2002 |
ED50 |
Contiguous Zone (Establishment) Act | Kingdom |
2005 | |
Contiguous Zone (Demarcation) Decree | Kingdom |
2006 |
|
Kingdom |
2009 |
||
Regulation on the common fisheries policy | European Union |