Recently, the Arctic has transformed from a peripheral region to an area of great interest, for instance in terms of oil drilling. Nonetheless, no legal instrument has addressed the matter of accountability for transfrontier oil pollution damage. This article accordingly evaluates whether the current legal constructs, meaning State responsibility, international liability, civil liability regimes, and multilateral environmental agreements, allow accountability to be established for transboundary environmental harm resulting from hydrocarbon exploitation in the Arctic. It also examines whether these constructions could serve as the basis for future legislative actions. This article treats these four constructions as layers of accountability. ...
Civil liability for pollution damage is recognized and firmly established under international law. H...
The Arctic – with almost a third of the world’s remaining natural gas and thirteen percent of its oi...
Since 2008, major oil and gas operators have invested billions attempting to drill Arctic Alaska\u27...
Latterly, the Arctic has transformed from a peripheral region to an area in the focus of the world, ...
The Arctic has enormous hydrocarbon potential which is attracting international oil companies to inv...
The Arctic has enormous hydrocarbon potential which is attracting international oil companies to inv...
The paper is partly based on the author’s PhD thesis submitted to the University of Aberdeen in 2017...
This article investigates the Arctic Council’s new Agreement on the response to marine oil pollution...
The Arctic Ocean’s physical environments and ecosystems are some of the most fragile and least well ...
Læst til 20.5.2083This thesis examines the international law pertaining to offshore oil and gas ext...
This article provides an examination and analysis of the laws and regulations on environmental liabi...
The history of Norwegian petroleum constitutes an important part of the construction of the welfare ...
Due to the demand for diversifying and modifying sources of raw materials and trade routes, the Arct...
INTRODUCTION. The authors of the article analyze the contemporaneous issues of international respons...
The civil liability regime for ship-source oil pollution stands at the forefront of rule development...
Civil liability for pollution damage is recognized and firmly established under international law. H...
The Arctic – with almost a third of the world’s remaining natural gas and thirteen percent of its oi...
Since 2008, major oil and gas operators have invested billions attempting to drill Arctic Alaska\u27...
Latterly, the Arctic has transformed from a peripheral region to an area in the focus of the world, ...
The Arctic has enormous hydrocarbon potential which is attracting international oil companies to inv...
The Arctic has enormous hydrocarbon potential which is attracting international oil companies to inv...
The paper is partly based on the author’s PhD thesis submitted to the University of Aberdeen in 2017...
This article investigates the Arctic Council’s new Agreement on the response to marine oil pollution...
The Arctic Ocean’s physical environments and ecosystems are some of the most fragile and least well ...
Læst til 20.5.2083This thesis examines the international law pertaining to offshore oil and gas ext...
This article provides an examination and analysis of the laws and regulations on environmental liabi...
The history of Norwegian petroleum constitutes an important part of the construction of the welfare ...
Due to the demand for diversifying and modifying sources of raw materials and trade routes, the Arct...
INTRODUCTION. The authors of the article analyze the contemporaneous issues of international respons...
The civil liability regime for ship-source oil pollution stands at the forefront of rule development...
Civil liability for pollution damage is recognized and firmly established under international law. H...
The Arctic – with almost a third of the world’s remaining natural gas and thirteen percent of its oi...
Since 2008, major oil and gas operators have invested billions attempting to drill Arctic Alaska\u27...