No edit summary
(→‎Metadata: Added data for the EMS edition)
Line 70: Line 70:


=Eastern Mediterranean Sea=
=Eastern Mediterranean Sea=
There are different disputed areas in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea that are disputed, caused by conflicting territorial claims of multiple countries. Plans made in the disputed areas need approval from all countries in the sea basin.
In the Eastern Mediterranean, there is continuous conflict as Turkey, Greece, Cyprus, Israel, Palestine, and Libya dispute over various territorial claims and maritime boundaries. These disagreements go beyond basic boundaries and extend to the allocation of valuable resources such as gas reserves, contributing to heightened tensions within the region. Despite efforts to negotiate and mediate, finding a mutually acceptable resolution remains a significant challenge, perpetuating a cycle of diplomatic impasse and geopolitical uncertainty.
 
In the Eastern Mediterranean, there is continues conflict as Turkey, Greece, Cyprus, Israel, Palestine, and Libya dispute over various territorial claims and maritime boundaries. These disagreements go beyond basic boundaries and extend to the allocation of valuable resources such as gas reserves, contributing to heightened tensions within the region. Despite efforts to negotiate and mediate, finding a mutually acceptable resolution remains a significant challenge, perpetuating a cycle of diplomatic impasse and geopolitical uncertainty.
* [[Orange]] (Cyprus)  
* [[Orange]] (Cyprus)  
* [[Red]] (Syria)
* [[Red]] (Syria)
* [[Green]] (Greece)
* [[Green]] (Greece)
* Disputed areas
* [[Grey]] (Disputed area)
* [[Purple]] (Israel)
* [[Purple]] (Israel)
* [[Pink]] (Egypt)
* [[Pink]] (Egypt)
Line 85: Line 83:
== Metadata ==
== Metadata ==


===Data Source===
<headertabs/>
 
===Original Title===
 
===Description===
 
===Creation Date===
 
===Methodology===
 
  <headertabs/>

Revision as of 16:50, 4 December 2024

National Planning Areas
Layer National Planning Areas.png
Layer Info
Category Management
Sub-category Governance

Description

The National Planning Areas correspond to the marine areas for which the different national authorities are responsible.

MSP Challenge

In the MSP Challenge, each of these areas is developed by one team. However, joint plans, overlapping more than one local authority area, are possible if the affected local authorities approve the plan. This is the equivalent of the Exclusive Economic Zones in other MSP editions.

Back to governance.

Not applicable.

This layer is not available in the North Sea Edition.

Not applicable.

This layer is not available in the Baltic Sea Edition.

Not applicable.

This layer is not available in the Clyde Marine Region Edition.

In the Adriatic Sea there are multiple National Planning Areas and disputed areas as you can see in the types below. Plans made in the disputed areas need approval from all countries in the sea basin.

There is a small number of areas in the Adriatic Sea that are disputed, caused by conflicting territorial claims of countries like Croatia, Slovenia, and Italy. The disputes not only concern maritime borders and fishing rights but also revolve around access to international waters and economic interests. In the last decade, several court decisions have been made by both countries, but finding a solution that suits both parties proves to be difficult. In the game, the disputed area is left unassigned and any plan in this areas needs approval from all countries.

Types

Metadata

Data Source

For Italy: IIM_limiti_piattaforma_continentale_250k

For other countries: legal Status from toold4msp.eu geoportal and Croatia division of Sea (portodimare) for Neum Bay

Original Title

Information not available.

Description

Information not available.

Creation Date

2020-06-16

Methodology

The layer was implemented in the MSP Challenge as provided by the project partner (CNR-ISMAR).

In the Eastern Mediterranean, there is continuous conflict as Turkey, Greece, Cyprus, Israel, Palestine, and Libya dispute over various territorial claims and maritime boundaries. These disagreements go beyond basic boundaries and extend to the allocation of valuable resources such as gas reserves, contributing to heightened tensions within the region. Despite efforts to negotiate and mediate, finding a mutually acceptable resolution remains a significant challenge, perpetuating a cycle of diplomatic impasse and geopolitical uncertainty.

Metadata

This page was last edited on 4 December 2024, at 16:50. Content is available under GPLv3 unless otherwise noted.