Africa
Litigating the Sea, Contesting the Seabed: Somalia v. Kenya and the Politics of EEZ Delimitation in the Age of Offshore Energy -By Fransiscus Nanga Roka
That is not an argument against adjudication. It is a case against romanticising it. Judicial settlement may defuse bilateral tension, but it does not extinguish the extractive logic that inscribes our current ocean governance arrangements. Neither does it respond to the inequalities of technological power which increasingly determine who gets access, can record and value sea. They have quietly reshaped the concept of sovereignty through seismic mapping, sub-bottom profiling, offshore data infrastructures and private energy contracts.
The Somalia v. Kenya Case is a celebrated example of success in international adjudication, largely with the perception that law resolved geopolitical tensions through judicial clarity. That story is soothing, beautiful and really wrong. It was never simply a case of drawing the right maritime boundary. It was about who gets to turn resurgent geology into state wealth, and that the question of sovereign futures offshore is one routinely regulated by international law asking how extractive impulse can be sanitized in a language ordered towards legality.
It was not, in this context, vis à vis the delimitation of spaces on sea just another body of water to be played around with. A disputed register of hydrocarbons, geopolitics and technocracies. When offshore oil and gas interests became potential considerations, the extent of legal wrangling over angle bisectors, equidistance, or relevant circumstances subsided. It turned into a contest with capital one is investing in anticipation of. Long before the issued judgment arrived from The Hague, geological data, seismic surveys and offshore licensing had converted the seabed into a space of anticipatory rivalry. Power did not come before law. Merely because the stakes had already been relocated by energy desire when law got here.
This is the main derivative hypocrisy of modern maritime adjudication. Delimitation looks like a technical and apparently neutral exercise in legal reasoning; yet, delimiting maritime boundaries often serves the interests of states with significant advantages identifying, mapping surveying licensing and exploiting undersea resources. The EEZ is, in theory at least, a legal fiction under the auspices of United Nations Convention on Law of sea. In practice, it is increasingly a market of strategic appropriation, where legal rights are inextricably linked to the technological capacity to look beneath the anterior equator and the financial means converting subterranean intelligence into geopolitical power.
This contradiction in international discourse is thrust into sharp focus by Somalia v. Kenya. This was couched in legalese, but there’s no mistaking the political economy of this case. International maritime boundaries are just lines on a map but energy matters and so they matter Why the seabed matters because states, corporations and investors no longer see the ocean as commons to be regulated but a frontier to be relentlessly carved up into zones of sovereignty that can then also have price tags on it too which always seem low compared to what they become when you drill them? The dispute does not end with drawing the legal line. It simply reallocates risk, opportunity and access to extraction.
This makes this more troubling is the moral theatre of international law. The ICJ is lauded for providing a rules based solution but the larger edifice remains standing: legal certainty is the precondition to offshore capitalization. Delimitation is hailed as peace whereas in actuality it may serve only the final administrative gesture before a phase of even further extraction. We should not be able, to talk solemnly about maritime justice without confronting the reality that adjudication is frequently solving for what enables its own forms of economic aggression beneath the waves.
That is not an argument against adjudication. It is a case against romanticising it. Judicial settlement may defuse bilateral tension, but it does not extinguish the extractive logic that inscribes our current ocean governance arrangements. Neither does it respond to the inequalities of technological power which increasingly determine who gets access, can record and value sea. They have quietly reshaped the concept of sovereignty through seismic mapping, sub-bottom profiling, offshore data infrastructures and private energy contracts. Maritime rights are no longer just asserted by law; they are produced though data, apparatuses, finance and the narrative of resources yet to be harvested.
In that respect, Somalia v. Kenya is more than a boundary case. It is a warning. It shows that we will not decide maritime conflict in the courthouse or diplomatic chamber alone, but through geophysical knowledge systems set to be more compelling than law and offshore energy regimes where claimants are rewarded with speed and technology. That maritime law as a civilizing framework is becoming more difficult to maintain Rather, we are seeing the overlap between formal legalistic and extractive opportunism.
And the saddest truth is, international law may not be restricting but legitimizing further scramble for offshore wealth. On the map, a judicial line can appear at peace whilst functioning as an on-going permit for increased competition beneath. As such, if the law of the sea pursues its agenda with disregard for all that we have learned about how offshore extraction actually works in practice and what it means to delimit maritime territory today, then delimitation will ultimately be less justice than a new language capable somehow of more adequately ordering greed’s geography.
Fransiscus Nanga Roka
Faculty of Law University 17 August 1945 Surabaya Indonesia