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High Seas Treaty Takes Effect, Creating First Global Framework for Ocean Biodiversity Beyond Borders

The pact is now binding on more than 80 parties, imposing environmental reviews alongside benefit-sharing obligations.

Overview

  • Entry into force on January 17 makes the BBNJ agreement international law for ratifying states covering waters beyond national jurisdiction, roughly two‑thirds of the ocean.
  • More than 80 countries have ratified, including China, Brazil and Japan, while the United States, the United Kingdom and Australia remain signatories without ratification.
  • Immediate requirements include treaty‑standard environmental impact assessments for activities that could harm marine life and fair, transparent sharing of benefits from marine genetic resources.
  • Key institutions and rules are being built, with a preparatory session due in late March and a first Conference of the Parties within a year to set budgets, committees and MPA approval procedures.
  • The treaty enables proposals for high‑seas marine protected areas toward the 30x30 goal, though enforcement, monitoring and funding remain challenges, and seabed mining stays under the International Seabed Authority.