SYSTEM FOR SETTLEMENT OF DISPUTES
Section: Part XV, Articles 279-299
Full text with footnotes

Part XV of the Convention itself includes only provisions for the conduct of the states parties, procedures, and jurisdiction, while the whole structure of the dispute settlement system includes four of the Annexes to the Convention: Conciliation (Annex V), Statue of the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (Annex VI), Arbitration (Annex VII), and Special Arbitration (Annex VIII). States Parties must exhaust all local remedies before resort is made to the procedures provided in this section of the Convention .
The basic tenent underlying the settlement of disputes is that the parties are bound to use only peaceful means  exchange their views without delay  behave in accordance with the requirements of the United Nations Charter  and seek a solution by negotiation, enquiry, mediation, conciliation, arbitration, and judicial settlement  in good faith . The final effort prior to official proceedings is a non-binding conciliation procedure . But it is necessary that the parties agree to conciliation proceedings and to the procedure to be applied  except in cases where conciliation is compulsory  such as when a coastal state is required to submit certain marine scientific research disputes  and fisheries disputes  to non-binding conciliation.
For disputes concerning the interpretation or applicability of the Convention, the compulsory procedures entailing binding decisions apply  with two exceptions:
1. Cases where the coastal state has jurisdiction with regard to central questions of fisheries and marine scientific research ;
2. Those cases where states have declared that they will not accept dispute settlement procedures in one or more of the following causes of dispute:
- sea boundary delimitations ;
- military activities
- law enforcement activities of coastal state for fisheries and scientific research;
- disputes before the United Nations Security Council .
For procedural settlement of disputes , the parties may choose among four fora: two courts (the International Court of Justice and the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea) and two arbitration tribunals . If no declaration to the contrary is in force, the state party is deemed to have accepted arbitration in accordance with Annex VII . Disputes involving release of vessels from detention can be submitted to the Tribunal of the Law of the Sea within ten days from the time of the detention, if the jurisdiction of no other court or tribunal is established . For disputes with respect to interpretation of the Area provisions of Part XI, the jurisdiction of the Sea-Bed Disputes Chamber, a chamber of the International Tribunal of the Law of the Sea  is compulsory , unless States Parties request that the dispute be submitted to a special chamber  or to an ad hoc chamber .
Of some importance for procedure are further provisions covering provisional measures , applicable law , preliminary proceedings , and the finality and binding force of decisions . At all
times of the dispute, the guiding principle is that the parties are free to choose any peaceful means of settling their differences .





THE FORA FOR THE SETTLEMENT OF DISPUTES
Section: Part XV, Articles 279-299

GENERAL OVERVIEW
I.  FORA FOR DISPUTES NOT RELATED TO JUDGEMENTS INVOLVING INTERPRETATION OF  THE CONVENTION

(1)Special Arbitration, Annex VIII, Article 5, Fact-Finding
(2)Conciliation Procedure, Annex V, Section 1 Pursuant to Part XI, Section 1, Settlement of Disputes (General Provisions)
(3)Binding Commercial Arbitration
- Interpretation of contracts and plan of work. Art. 188, Subpara. 2(a)
- Financial terms. Annex III, Art. 13, Para. 15
- Financial terms of technology transfer. Annex III Art. 5, Para. 4

II.CHOICE BETWEEN ONE OR MORE OF FOUR FORA IN CASES OF COMPULSORY PROCEEDINGS (ART 287, PARA 1)

States Parties are free to choose among the fora (No. 4-7) for the settlement of disputes concerning the interpretation or applicability of the Convention (for limited court/tribunal jurisdiction on matters (a) sovereign rights of coastal states; (b) military; (c) boundaries; (d) Security Council, see Art. 297-298)

Reprint from 1988 Edition
 

 

 
 
International Court of Justice
Arbitration (Annex VII)
International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (Annex VI)
Special Arbitration (Annex VIII) Regarding: Fisheries, Environment, Scientific Research, Navigation
Special Chamber (Annex VI, Article 15) Formed by the Tribunal for the Law of the Sea as necessary
( 4 )
( 5 )
( 6 )
( 7 )
( 8 )

 
NB:        If a State Party has not made a declaration or if the parties of the dispute have not agreed to a forum, the dispute is to be submitted to Arbitration (Annex VII). The parties can agree otherwise (Art. 287, Paras. 3-5). A question of the detention of a vessel may be submitted to the court or tribunal of the choice of the parties; otherwise, to the Tribunal for the International Law of the Sea (Art. 292, Para. 1)

III. COMPULSORY FORA
  (9)  Sea-Bed Disputes Chamber (Annex VI, Article 3)
           - Compulsory (Art. 287, Para. 2; Jurisdiction: Art, 288, Para. 3; Activities in the Area, Art. 187)
  (10) Ad Hoc Chamber of the Sea-Bed Disputes Chamber (Annex VI, Article 36)
          - May be formed at the request of States Parties (Art. 188, Para. 1) with respect to seabed activities      
              (Article 187)
  (11) Conciliation Procedures (Annex V, Section 2, Articles 11-14)
          - Compulsory (Annex V, Section 2); On matters stated in Part XV, Section 3
          - Article 297, Paragraph 2 (Certain matters of marine scientific research)
          - Article 297, Paragraph 3 (Certain matters of fisheries)