Sovereignty Over Airspace: International Law, Current Challenges, and Future Developments For Global Aviation
Sovereignty Over Airspace: International Law, Current Challenges, and Future Developments For Global Aviation
Sovereignty Over Airspace: International Law, Current Challenges, and Future Developments For Global Aviation
Sovereignty Over
Airspace: International
Law, Current Challenges,
and Future
Developments for Global
Aviation
By Chrystel Erotokritou
2012, VOL. 4 NO. 05 | PG. 1/4 | »
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IN THIS ARTICLE
KEYWORDS
International Law Aviation International Air Law Sovereignty Airspace Chicago Convention Flying
The issue of sovereignty lies at the very heart of international aviation because
all aviation relations are built upon it. The purpose of this paper is to discuss the
spectacular evolution of the concept of sovereignty in the air by adopting a
multifaceted approach to this issue. In the first part the concept of sovereignty
under general international law is briefly explained, before defining it in the
more specific framework of public international air law. This discussion is
followed by an analysis of the way states open their airspace for the purpose of
entering into commercial agreements and conducting air transport activities.
Overall, a selection of accidents that were directly linked to the notion of
national security sovereignty are examined. Special reference is made to Cyprus
and Gibraltar, both countries having territorial conflicts that directly affect their
ability to exercise complete and exclusive sovereignty above their airspace.
Particular attention is granted to some more recent commercial, technical, legal
and environmental developments in the European Union that touch upon the
concept of sovereignty such as the delegation of air navigation services from
one state to another, the delimitation between airspace and outer space, the
introduction of a European Emission Trading Scheme, insurance requirements,
and the frequently updated list of airlines banned in the European Union.
2(2) of the Charter of the United Nations recognizes that all States are equal
and sovereign because they are all politically independent).[5] The United
Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea provides that the sovereignty of
6
States extends over 12 nautical miles, called the territorial sea (article 3).
Following the theory laid down by Hugo Grotius in his Mare Liberum[7], it was
established under international customary law that the high seas cannot be
appropriated by any State. In other words, no State can claim sovereign rights
above these regions. The right of innocent passage was recognized for all civil
and military ships of all States. Moreover States must not infringe upon the
rights of the coastal State or disrupt the peace or represent a security threat for
this State (Convention on the law of the Sea, articles 17 and 19).
owner of the land was the owner of the whole airspace above it without any
limits. Obviously such conception is no valid anymore because it is incompatible
with the modern needs of the air transport industry but is worth mentioning
because it was largely accepted until the birth of the civil aviation.
As early as 1901, the French legal scholar Paul Fauchille wrote an article
entitled ‘’Le domain aerien et le regime juridique des aerostats’’ in which he
referred to, inter alia, the freedom of the air. Some years later, John Westlake, a
9
States and the aviation industry have always been connected by a particular
link. The Paris Convention and the Chicago Convention have been enacted
11 12
Article 1 of the Paris Convention 1919 provided that each contracting party
recognized that every Power had complete and exclusive sovereignty over the
airspace above their territory. Article 1 of the Chicago Convention reproduces
this formula in an identical way. Article 2 defines territory as ‘’the land areas and
territorial waters adjacent thereto under the sovereignty, suzerainty, protection
or mandate of such State’’. Some of these terms are nowadays outdated or
obsolete. Indeed, protectorates and mandates ceased to exist even before the
entry into force of the Chicago Convention. 15
A minority of authors, such as Nicolas Matte, argue that the airspace belongs to
the ‘’physical space’’ in which the world community interacts and therefore no
parts of it can be made subject to sovereignty claims from any nation, even for a
limited period of time. Matte believes that the airspace is a common good that
must be used in a peaceful way by humanity. Hence such a conception must be
predominant over ‘’egoistic’’ claims of individual States that seek their own
interests and immediate economic benefits. 16
The International Air Services Transit Agreement was signed in 1944 and since
17
Article 6 of the Chicago Convention provides that ‘’no scheduled international air
service may be operated over or into the territory of a contracting State, except
with the special permission or authorisation of that State, and in accordance
with the terms of such permission or authorisation’’. In other words, this
provision means that the airspace of all contracting States is closed de iure,
until States decide to open it de facto. Until recently, bilateral air service
agreements remained the traditional and preferred mode for States to open their
airspace to other States, for the purposes of entering into international air
transport operations and regulating the economic aspect of these
exchanges. The most famous model bilateral air service agreement was signed
19
between the United States and the United Kingdom in 1944 and is commonly
referred to as the Bermuda I agreement. This agreement was a compromise
between the opposing views of the parties and gave birth to a regime based on
fair and equal opportunities to compete, a double approval of tariffs and capacity
possibilities based upon the needs of the public for air transport operations. It
20
can be said that at the time of the signature of this agreement, States were still
strongly intervening into the regulation of air transport and thus still attached to
the concept of sovereignty. Naveau argues that the principle of sovereignty in
the air explains why the air industry is one of the very few areas of trade where
bilateralism survived. 21
the internal market of the European Union in 1997, any EU carrier can operate on
any EU route, including purely domestic routes. Full cabotage rights within the
EU are an astonishing development and a great step away from the traditional
conception of sovereignty. There are now more international routes, new airlines
and many airports are on the way to privatisation. The EU and the US signed
Open Skies agreements under which airlines in the EU are able to fly to the US,
from any airport in the EU, without having regard to their nationality. These
changes involve renouncing to the nationalistic conceptions that inspired the
drafters of the major legal instruments public international air law after the
Second World War. 23
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