Australia–Indonesia border

The Australia–Indonesia border[1] is a maritime boundary running west from the two countries' tripoint maritime boundary with Papua New Guinea in the western entrance to the Torres Straits through the Arafura Sea and Timor Sea and terminating in the Indian Ocean. The boundary is, however, broken by the "Timor Gap", where Australian and East Timorese territorial waters meet and where the two countries have overlapping claims to the seabed.

Australia and Indonesia also share a common maritime border in the Indian Ocean between Australia's oversea territory of Christmas Island and the Indonesian island of Java.

An interesting characteristic of the maritime border between the two countries is the separation of the ownership of the seabed (essentially the continental shelf) and ownership of the water column (exclusive economic zone), each with their own boundary. Ownership over the seabed gives the country rights over all mineral resources in the seabed while ownership of the water column allows a country over fishing rights and other resources of the water in the specified area. The treaty establishing this and the western parts of the border as well as that between Christmas Island and Java, signed in 1997, has however not been ratified and is not in force. This was because the independence of East Timor required amendments to the 1997 treaty and agreement over them by the two parties is still pending.

The border

The boundary is separated into three segments, with the first two broken by the Timor Gap. The first is between the Australia – Indonesia – Papua New Guinea tripoint at 10° 50' S, 139° 12' E, and the point whether the territorial waters of the two countries touch the eastern limits of the territorial waters claimed by East Timor at 9° 28' S, 127° 56' E. The second segment runs westward from the point where the territorial waters of the two countries touch the western limits of East Timor's territorial waters claim at 10° 28' S, 126° 00' E, to 13° 05' 27.0" S, 118° 10' 08.9" E in the Indian Ocean. The third is between the Australian external territory of Christmas Island and the Indonesia island of Java, in the Indian Ocean.

The boundary is established by three treaties, the third of which has been signed but not yet ratified. The Agreement between the Government of the Commonwealth of Australia and the Government of the Republic of Indonesia establishing Certain Seabed Boundaries[2] signed in Canberra on 18 May 1971 established part of the eastern segment of the seabed boundary (as well as Indonesia's maritime boundary with Papua New Guinea in the Torres Straits) while the Agreement between the Government of the Commonwealth of Australia and the Government of the Republic of Indonesia establishing certain seabed boundaries in the area of the Timor and Arafura Seas, Supplementary to the Agreement of 18 May 1971[3] which was signed in Jakarta on 9 October 1972 demarcated the rest of the eastern segment and a portion of the western segment of the seabed boundary. The third treaty, the Treaty between the Government of Australia and the Government of the Republic of Indonesia establishing an Exclusive Economic Zone Boundary and Certain Seabed Boundaries[4] (informally known as the Australia–Indonesia Maritime Delimitation Treaty) which was signed in Perth on 14 March 1997, extended the western segment of the seabed boundary to its termination point in the Indian Ocean.

The basis for establishing the boundary in the 1971 and 1972 treaties was that of the "natural prolongation" of the physical continental shelf. This resulted in the boundary running significantly north of the median line between the shores of Australia and Indonesia, thus benefiting Australia in terms of the division of the seabed ownership. The International Law view of settling overlapping claims has then moved towards the median-line concept, although Australia still holds the view that natural prolongation was still relevant to determine the sovereignty of the seabed. This resulted in the separate treatment of establishing the seabed boundary and that for the water column, or essentially, the separation of the continental shelf and exclusive economic zone boundaries under the 1997 treaty.[5]

The independence of East Timor on 20 May 2002 may result in changes in the Australia–Indonesia border near the Timor Gap which were established by the three treaties. Provisions of the 1997 treaty on matters concerning the Timor Gap – such as reaffirming the Timor Gap Treaty between Australia and Indonesia and the drawing of the water column boundary through the area of joint development – would no longer be applicable with East Timor becoming the rightful claimant of the seabed and exclusive economic zone in the area. Furthermore, the "Timor Gap terminal points" established by the 1972 treaty, namely Points A16 and A17, might have to be renegotiated by Australia, East Timor and Indonesia, as East Timor might have the basis to seek a "wider" Timor Gap than originally provided by Australia and Indonesia.[6][7]

Seabed (continental shelf) boundary

Eastern segment

The eastern segment of the boundary was established by both the 1971 and 1972 treaties, the former delimiting the border from A3 to A12 and the latter extending it from A12 to A16, which lies on the eastern border of the Australia – East Timor joint petroleum development area. Points A1, A2 and A3 form part of the Indonesia – Papua New Guinea border which was also established under the 1971 treaty when Papua New Guinea was still an Australian territory.

Point Longitude (E) Latitude (S) Remarks
Australia, Indonesia and Papua New Guinea common tripoint
A3 139° 12' 10° 50'
Eastern segment of the Australia-Indonesia seabed boundary
A4 138° 38' 10° 24'
A5 138° 35' 10° 22'
A6 138° 13' 10° 9'
A7 137° 45' 9° 57'
A8 135° 29' 9° 8'
A9 135° 13' 9° 17'
A10 135° 3' 9° 22'
A11 134° 50' 9° 25'
A12 133° 23' 8° 53'
A13 133° 14' 8° 54'
A14 130° 10' 9° 25'
A15 128° 9° 25'
A16 127° 56' 9° 28' This point lies on the eastern border of the Australia-East Timor joint petroleum development area, may be subject to change after negotiations with East Timor

Western segment

The 1972 treaty brought the boundary to Point A25 to the north-east of Australia's Ashmore Island. The 1997 treaty extended it further west, terminating at A82 in the Indian Ocean where Australia's and Indonesia's exclusive economic zone limits diverge.

Point Longitude (E) Latitude (S) Remarks
Western segment of the Australia-Indonesia seabed boundary pursuant to 1972 treaty
A17 126° 10° 28' This point lies on the western border of the Australia-East Timor joint petroleum development area, may be subject to change after negotiations with East Timor
A18 125° 41' 10° 37'
A19 125° 19' 11° 1'
A20 124° 34' 11° 7'
A21 124° 10' 11° 25'
A22 124° 11° 26'
A23 123° 40' 11° 28'
A24 123° 26' 11° 23'
A25 123° 14' 11° 35'
Western extension of the boundary pursuant to 1997 treaty
A26 123° 14' 4.5" 11° 48' 6.1"
A27 123° 13' 38.1" 11° 47' 59.3"
A28 123° 12' 12.7" 11° 47' 40.3"
A29 123° 12' 5.1" 11° 47' 38.9"
A30 123° 11' 2.9" 11° 47' 25.6"
A31 123° 5' 27.9" 11° 46' 25.7"
A32 123° 0' 49.7" 11° 46' 31.8"
A33 122° 59' 22.9" 11° 46' 44.2"
A34 122° 57' 32.5" 11° 47' 07.4"
A35 122° 56' 8.2" 11° 47' 31"
A36 122° 53' 24.7" 11° 48' 32.1"
A37 122° 50' 34.5" 11° 50' 0.6"
A38 122° 49' 19.9" 11° 50' 48.1"
A39 122° 48' 5.1" 11° 51' 12.9"
A40 122° 47' 38.9" 11° 51' 22.4"
A41 122° 46' 21.2" 11° 51' 53.3"
A42 122° 44' 16.8" 11° 52' 53.4"
A43 122° 41' 4.3" 11° 54' 56.3"
A44 122° 40' 0.5" 11° 55' 46.7"
A45 122° 35' 27.9" 12° 0' 41.4"
A46 122° 34' 33.8" 12° 2' 5"
A47 122° 33' 55.8" 12° 3' 12.2"
A48 122° 32' 24.1" 12° 6' 44.6" The border then proceeds southerly in an arc of a circle drawn concave to Ashmore Island with a radius of 24 nautical miles (44 km) to Point A49
A49 122° 31' 6.6" 12° 14' 25.8"
A50 120° 0' 46.9" 13° 56' 31.7"
A51 120° 0' 46.9" 12° 46' 27.9"
A52 119° 59' 31" 12° 45' 47"
A53 119° 59' 15" 12° 45' 38"
A54 119° 56' 13" 12° 43' 46"
A55 119° 53' 18" 12° 41' 57"
A56 119° 52' 57" 12° 41' 46"
A57 119° 52' 38" 12° 41' 36"
A58 119° 50' 28" 12° 40' 33"
A59 119° 40' 33" 12° 35' 43"
A60 119° 33' 16" 12° 32' 31"
A61 12° 29' 19" 119° 27' 17"
A62 12° 25' 43" 119° 21' 35"
A63 12° 24' 59" 119° 20' 34"
A64 12° 23' 58" 119° 16' 35"
A65 12° 23' 42" 119° 15' 23"
A66 12° 21' 51" 119° 9' 3"
A67 12° 20' 21" 119° 5' 0"
A68 12° 19' 55" 119° 2' 40"
A69 12° 18' 50" 118° 58' 31"
A70 12° 17' 54" 118° 55' 12"
A71 12° 15' 57" 118° 49' 30"
A72 12° 13' 12" 118° 43' 9"
A73 12° 11' 1" 118° 39' 0"
A74 12° 10' 26" 118° 37' 28"
A75 12° 10' 6" 118° 35' 16"
A76 12° 7' 46" 118° 25' 07"
A77 12° 6' 21" 118° 20' 45"
A78 12° 4' 19" 118° 7' 44"
A79 12° 4' 8.8" 118° 6' 14.4"
A80 12° 4' 24.9" 118° 6' 17.2"
A81 12° 49' 54.8" 118° 14' 22.6"
A82 13° 5' 27.0" 118° 10' 8.9"

Christmas Island/Java segment

Christmas Island is an external territory of Australia located in the Indian Ocean 186 nautical miles (344 km) south of the southern coast of Java. The maritime boundary between the island and Indonesia which was established by the 1997 treaty is a modified median line which lies closer to the island by virtue of it being an isolated island lying next to the coastline of a larger country.[5] The boundary generally runs east-west and terminates both ends where the boundary of the Australian exclusive economic zone created around Christmas Island diverges from the Indonesian EEZ. Unlike the boundary in the Arafura and Timor Seas, there are no separate boundaries for the seabed and water column.

Point Longitude (E) Latitude (S)
Christmas Island/Java boundary
C1 109° 1' 25.8" 11° 10' 24.6"
C2 105° 50' 55.4" 9° 46' 49.8"
C3 102° 34' 12.7" 8° 52' 14.1"

Water column (exclusive economic zone) boundary

A separate "water column boundary", essentially an exclusive economic zone boundary for the ownership of fishery resources, was created under the 1997 treaty. The boundary starts from the Australia-Indonesia-Papua New Guinea tripoint at 10° 50' 00" S, 139° 12' 00" E, which is Point A3 of the seabed boundary and designated as Point Z1 of the water column boundary. It runs to the south of the Australia-Indonesia seabed boundary and terminates in the Indian Ocean where the Australian and Indonesia EEZ diverge. The boundary essentially follows the Provisional Fisheries Surveillance and Enforcement Line (PFSEL), a non-treaty status agreement made in 1981 between the two countries, and is generally based on the median line principle measures from the Australian mainland and Indonesian archipelagic baseline.

The 1997 treaty essentially separates the sovereignty of the seabed and water column in the area between the water column boundary and the seabed boundary, whereby Australia has sovereignty over the seabed and its resources, while Indonesia has sovereignty over the water column and the resources which live in it.

Although the 1997 treaty did not "close" the Timor Gap by establishing the seabed boundary in the area, it however established the water column boundary, which virtually corresponded with the boundary between Zone A and Zone B under the Timor Gap Treaty. With the independence of East Timor, this stretch of the water column boundary between Point Z28 and Point Z36 was no longer applicable. The stretch is now replaced with a "water column jurisdiction" line drawn by the Treaty on Certain Maritime Arrangements in the Timor Sea between Australia and East Timor signed on 12 January 2006 which corresponds with the southern border of the Australia-East Timor Joint Petroleum Development Area (JPDA), with Australia having control over the water column south of the line, and East Timor to the north including over the entire JPDA.

Point Longitude (E) Latitude (S) Remarks
Australia-Indonesia water column (EEZ) boundary
Z1 139° 12' 00" 10° 50' 00"
Z2 138° 38' 00" 10° 24' 00"
Z3 138° 35' 00" 10° 22' 00"
Z4 138° 13' 00" 10° 09' 00"
Z5 137° 45' 00" 9° 57' 00"
Z6 135° 29' 00" 9° 08' 00"
Z7 135° 13' 00" 9° 17' 00"
Z8 135° 03' 00" 9° 22' 00"
Z9 134° 50' 00" 9° 25' 00"
Z10 133° 23' 00" 8° 53' 00"
Z11 132° 46' 00" 9° 06' 00"
Z12 132° 33' 00" 9° 14' 00"
Z13 132° 30' 00" 9° 16' 00"
Z14 132° 20' 00" 9° 20' 00"
Z15 132° 12' 00" 9° 23' 00"
Z16 131° 57' 00" 9° 31' 00"
Z17 131° 52' 00" 9° 33' 00"
Z18 131° 43' 00" 9° 36' 00"
Z19 131° 31' 00" 9° 40' 00"
Z20 131° 28' 00" 9° 42' 00"
Z21 130° 55' 00" 9° 47' 00"
Z22 130° 43' 00" 9° 45' 00"
Z23 130° 06' 00" 9° 39' 00"
Z24 129° 30' 00" 9° 45' 00"
Z25 129° 01' 00" 9° 59' 00"
Z26 128° 18' 00" 10° 26' 00"
Z27 128° 14' 00" 10° 28' 00"
Z28 128° 12' 28.4" 10° 29' 11.8" No longer applicable with East Timor's independence
Z29 127° 59' 20.4" 10° 43' 37.8" No longer applicable with East Timor's independence
Z30 127° 48' 49.4" 10° 53' 36.8" No longer applicable with East Timor's independence
Z31 127° 47' 08.4" 10° 55' 20.8" No longer applicable with East Timor's independence
Z32 127° 31' 37.4" 11° 14' 18.9" No longer applicable with East Timor's independence
Z33 126° 58' 17.4" 11° 17' 24.9" No longer applicable with East Timor's independence
Z34 126° 57' 11.4" 11° 17' 30.9" No longer applicable with East Timor's independence
Z35 126° 47' 08.4" 11° 19' 40.9" No longer applicable with East Timor's independence
Z36 126° 31' 58.4" 11° 20' 02.9" No longer applicable with East Timor's independence
Z37 126° 31' 00" 11° 20' 00"
Z38 126° 28' 00" 11° 21' 00"
Z39 126° 12' 00" 11° 26' 00"
Z40 126° 00' 00" 11° 31' 00"
Z41 125° 45' 00" 11° 37' 00"
Z42 125° 25' 00" 11° 45' 00"
Z43 125° 20' 00" 11° 47' 00"
Z44 123° 33' 55.1" 12° 15' 34.4" thence northerly along the arc of a circle drawn concave to Ashmore Islands with a radius of 24 nautical miles (44 km) to the following point
Z45 123° 33' 55.8" 12° 14' 46.7"
Thence generally northerly, north-westerly, westerly, south-westerly, and southerly along a series of intersecting circular arcs drawn concave to Ashmore Islands with a radius of 24 nautical miles (44 km) and having the following vertices:-
Z46 123° 33' 50.3" 12° 12' 43.7"
Z47 123° 33' 19.1" 12° 09' 21.0"
Z48 123° 32' 57.8" 12° 07' 56.3"
Z49 123° 32' 42.5" 12° 07' 04.6"
Z50 123° 31' 45.6" 12° 04' 15.3"
Z51 123° 30' 32.4" 12° 01' 34.7"
Z52 123° 29' 41.2" 12° 00' 01.1"
Z53 123° 29' 08.7" 11° 59' 08.6"
Z54 123° 28' 56.2" 11° 58' 49.6"
Z55 123° 28' 54.5" 11° 58' 46.9"
Z56 123° 27' 32.8" 11° 56' 52.6"
Z57 123° 25' 59.8" 11° 55' 05.8"
Z58 123° 21' 44.0" 11° 51' 32.1"
Z59 123° 19' 07.9" 11° 50' 02.2"
Z60 123° 18' 32.9" 11° 49' 45.0"
Z61 123° 16' 44.4" 11° 48' 58.5"
Z62 123° 15' 32.5" 11° 48' 32.5"
Z63 123° 13' 38.1" 11° 47' 59.3"
Z64 123° 12' 12.7" 11° 47' 40.3"
Z65 123° 12' 05.2" 11° 47' 38.9"
Z66 123° 11' 02.9" 11° 47' 25.6"
Z67 123° 05' 27.9" 11° 46' 25.7"
Z68 123° 00' 49.7" 11° 46' 31.8"
Z69 122° 59' 22.9" 11° 46' 44.2"
Z70 122° 57' 32.5" 11° 47' 07.4"
Z71 122° 56' 08.2" 11° 47' 31.0"
Z72 122° 53' 24.7" 11° 48' 32.1"
Z73 122° 50' 34.5" 11° 50' 00.6"
Z74 122° 49' 19.9" 11° 50' 48.1"
Z75 122° 48' 05.1" 11° 51' 12.9"
Z76 122° 47' 38.9" 11° 51' 22.4"
Z77 122° 46' 21.2" 11° 51' 53.3"
Z78 122° 44' 16.8" 11° 52' 53.4"
Z79 122° 41' 04.3" 11° 54' 56.3"
Z80 122° 40' 00.5" 11° 55' 46.7"
Z81 122° 35' 27.9" 12° 00' 41.4"
Z82 122° 34' 33.8" 12° 02' 05.0"
Z83 122° 33' 55.8" 12° 03' 12.2"
Z84 122° 32' 24.1" 12° 06' 44.6"
Thence southerly along the arc of a circle drawn concave to Ashmore Islands with a radius of 24 nautical miles (44 km) to the point:
Z85 122° 31' 06.6" 12° 14' 25.8"
Z86 122° 31' 06.6" 12° 50' 28.2"
Z87 121° 49' 00" 13° 15' 00"
Z88 120° 00' 46.9" 13° 56' 31.7"
Thence north-westerly along the arc of a circle with a radius of 200 nautical miles (370 km) drawn through the following points:
Z89 119° 52' 30.7" 13° 53' 03.7"
Z90 119° 44' 24.5" 13° 49' 14.5"
Z91 119° 36' 29.3" 13° 45' 04.5"
To the point:
Z92 119° 28' 46.1" 13° 40' 34.1"
Z93 119° 22' 08.7" 13° 36' 30.2"
Thence north-westerly along the arc of a circle with a radius of 200 nautical miles (370 km) drawn through the following points:
Z94 119° 13' 33.5" 13° 34' 26.1"
Z95 119° 05' 04.4" 13° 32' 00.1"
Z96 118° 56' 42.4" 13° 29' 12.5"
Z97 118° 48' 28.4" 13° 26' 03.7"
Z98 118° 40' 23.4" 13° 22' 34.0"
Z99 118° 32' 28.3" 13° 18' 43.8"
To the point:
Z100 118° 24' 44.1" 13° 14' 33.6"

Disputes

With the signing of the 1997 Australia–Indonesia Maritime Delimitation Treaty, most grey areas between the two countries, whose relations have at various stages ranged from cordial to downright hostile, concerning their common maritime boundary could be deemed to have been settled. This includes not only the question of sovereignty over the seabed but also the ownership of resources inhabiting the water column above the seabed.[8] The earlier dispute over the sovereignty of the seabed in the area known as the "Timor Gap" also ended with the secession and independence of East Timor.

The following were areas of disputes in the historical context.

Boundary delimitation principle

Further information: boundary delimitation

The first two treaties to establish the seabed boundary between Australia and Indonesia utilised the "natural prolongation of the continental shelf" principle. Especially for the second treaty, Australia argued that the deep Timor Trough was the natural edge of its continental shelf. The resulting boundary was therefore located closer to Indonesia and had potentially denied considerable share of petroleum resources from the seabed.

Despite the principle being agreed to via negotiations, its use had been a constant point of discontent on the part of the Indonesians, with its former Foreign Minister Mochtar Kusumaatmadja saying that the country had been "taken to the cleaners" by Australia.[9] With the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, Indonesia argued that the median line – the equidistant line from the baselines of both countries – was the correct location of the boundary. The growing strength of Indonesia's argument over Australia's natural prolongation principle had a significant bearing on the subsequent treaties between the two countries, namely the Timor Gap Treaty of 1989 and the 1997 Australia–Indonesia Maritime Delimitation Treaty.

The differing principles on where the boundary was to be located resulted in the inability to reach agreement to close the Timor Gap with a permanent maritime boundary. A resources sharing joint development area arrangement instead had to be agreed to. Further details on this in the following section.

The 1997 treaty saw Australia's natural prolongation argument prevail as far as the seabed (essentially the continental shelf) claim is concerned. However, Indonesia's median line argument was accepted for establishing its rights over the water column or exclusive economic zone, resulting in the separation of the two types of boundaries. The treaty recognises Indonesia's full ownership of living resources in the water north of the water column boundary and south of the seabed boundary. The water column boundary, essentially the median line, has in fact been a de facto EEZ boundary since such a line was established by the Provisional Fisheries Surveillance and Enforcement Line (PFSEL) which was agreed to in 1981.[5]

Timor Gap

Australia and Indonesia were engaged in negotiations to solve a dispute over overlapping claims to the continental shelf in the Timor Gap when East Timor was annexed and became part of Indonesian territory in 1975. After the two earlier seabed boundary treaties, Indonesia was determined that the seabed boundary that would close the Timor Gap would lie along the median line between the two countries. Australia however saw that its continental shelf should stretch to the Timor Trough, a deep trench in the Timor Sea which was located 40 nautical miles (74 km) from the southern shore of Timor and at least 250 nautical miles (460 km) from Australia.

Talks began in 1979 but there was no agreement over the permanent maritime boundary. Instead, the two countries settled for a "sovereignty neutral" agreement in 1989 which allowed joint exploitation and equal sharing of petroleum resources in a "zone of cooperation" which lay in between the extremes of the claims by the two countries.

The 1989 treaty was no longer valid once East Timor seceded from Indonesia in 1999, and the new state was not bound by the treaty. Indonesia had also informed Australia later that year that it was no longer bound by the Timor Gap Treaty.

The dispute over the Timor Gap now is between Australia and East Timor and does not involve Indonesia. However, Indonesia may have to become a party in negotiations to establish the Australia-East Timor-Indonesia border tripoints if East Timor chooses not to be bound by the current "width" of the Timor Gap which was decided by Australia and Indonesia (through the 1972 treaty) without consultation with the East Timorese or Portugal which was then the colonial administrator of East Timor.

See also

References

  1. See map by the Geoscience Australia "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 November 2008. Retrieved 2008-10-23.
  2. Full text of treaty available at the Australian Treaty Series website
  3. Full text available at the Australian Treaty Series website
  4. Full text available in the Australian Treaty Series website
  5. 1 2 3 National Interest Analysis: Treaty between the Government of Australia and the Government of the Republic of Indonesia establishing an Exclusive Economic Zone Boundary and Certain Seabed Boundaries, done at Perth on 14 March 1997, 1997, retrieved 2008-10-24
  6. V. Lowe, C. Carleton & C. Ward, "In the Matter of East Timor's Maritime Boundaries", opinion prepared for Petrotimor Companhia de Petroleos, S.A.R.L., 11 April 2002 available at Petrotimor's website "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 19 August 2009. Retrieved 2008-10-27.
  7. Prescott, Victor (1999), The Question of East Timor's Maritime Boundaries (PDF), IBRU Boundary and Security Bulletin Winter 1999–2000, retrieved 2008-10-27.
  8. "Australia-Indonesia Maritime Delimitation Treaty" (PDF), Joint Standing Committee on Treaties Report (Parliament of Australia), 12: 1, 1 December 1997
  9. Robert J. King, “A Gap in the Relationship: the Timor Gap, 1972-2013”, March 2013, submission to the inquiry by the Australian Parliament Joint Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade into Australia's relationship with Timor-Leste. accessdate = 2014-12-12
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