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Argentina claims Falklands rig in Argentine waters
CreatedSunday, 19 February 2012

ARGENTINE newspaper Ambito Financiero has claimed exploration rig Leiv Eiriksson, contracted by two oil companies to drill to the south of the Falkland Islands, “was found, on Thursday, exploring in Argentine waters”, according to ‘irrefutable’ satellite images.

mercopress.com reported that oil industry sources downplayed the news and said that oil rig deployment in the Islands’ waters is quite different from what is published from Buenos Aires: “We are quite used to Argentine misinformation and imagination.” Furthermore, “there is a lot of artistic licence put into that (satellite) image – reality is quite different.”

Ambito reports that the rig along with Toisa Intrepid and the multipurpose Toisa Sonat, “at the end of last month were located very close to the 200 miles from the Argentine continental shelf, which caused alarm among (Argentine) authorities.” Later a third Norwegian flagged salvage vessel, Ocean Prince joined the group.

It added that in recent days both the Leiv Eiriksson and its accompanying vessels violated the borders of Argentina’s Economic Exclusion Zone, EEZ, having advanced between 8 to 10 nautical miles beyond the pre-determined limits, to 190 miles off the Argentine coast, based on images from the Mompesat satellite monitoring system to which Ambito had access.

The article went on, “The oil rig and companion ships spent over 90 hours in that location exploring or carrying out exploratory tasks, which led to speculation that the company is considering a third well, located within Argentine territorial waters.”

Ambito said irrefutable satellite images showed that on Wednesday the platform was located at the coordinates -53°59’54’7 south -58°76’51’1 west. However, by midday yesterday (Thursday) it had retreated and briefly sailed toward the Islands before dropping anchor at 53°35’44’63 south and 58°45’55’13 west. According to sources with access to the Mompesat satellite monitoring system, the positioning of the platform was brought to the attention of the authorities.

Ambito continued: “in recent months we detected that they were on the point of violating our economic exclusion zone and for this reason we have been constantly monitoring” said a source.

Meanwhile, added Mercopress, sources linked to the Argentine Foreign Affairs Ministry confirmed that this, “is not the first time that an oil rig violates the zone limits, although it is the first time that this has happened since the diplomatic conflict bubbled to the surface in January.”

According to those sources, “the Ocean Guardian, exploring to the north of the archipelago since 2010 is (was) also positioned within Argentina’s continental shelf.”

Mercopress says however, that the article also partly explains a possible cause for the different interpretation of the limits of the adjoining EEZs: “For the Argentine state, according to the presentation by COPLA (National Committee for the Exterior Limit of the Continental Shelf) to the United Nations, the continental shelf of a bordering state includes the sea bed and sub-marine layers which extend beyond its territorial sea and across the length of the natural extension of its territory to the outer border of the continental margin, or to a distance of 200 miles counted from the base lines from which the borders of the territorial sea are measured, when the outer border of the continental margin does not reach the same distance.”

However, this position conflicts with the United Kingdom, who, taking the “bordering state” to be the Falklands/Malvinas Islands, consider a large part of the waters around the Islands to be their EEZ.

Ambito said the Argentine Foreign Affairs minister has sent notes of discouragement to the companies involved: to oil companies as well as the accompanying ships and support vessels. But also admits frustration at the lack of echo from the different complaints the Argentine government has sent out, and admits a fundamental problem: “It is the ‘kelper’ (Falklands’) government which awards the exploration licenses and therefore the complaint should be addressed to them, but doing so would in some way acknowledge sovereignty which contradicts the basic (sovereignty) claim.”

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