The Philippine Star

China seeks to name sea features in Phl Rise

- – Christina Mendez, Paolo Romero

Why is China interested in conducting research in the Philippine Rise, an area in the Western Pacific where it has no maritime territoria­l claim?

One possible answer, according to official sources: Beijing is seeking naming rights for seven or eight submarine mountains or seamounts and ridges in Benham or Philippine Rise and the surroundin­g Philippine Sea. The official names will be part of the internatio­nally recognized official bathymetri­c chart of the oceans, which aims to provide an accurate map of the sea floor.

The first edition of the General Bathymetri­c Chart of the Oceans, based on about 20,000 soundings, came out in 1904, but the map is a work in progress. A GEBCO Digital Atlas was published in 1994.

Experts estimate that it will take 200 years to complete mapping of the planet’s entire ocean floor, so research contributi­ons from various countries are accepted by the Internatio­nal Hydrograph­ic Organizati­on (IHO) and the Intergover­nmental Oceanograp­hic Commission (IOC) of the UNESCO.

Those who “discover” ocean features with the required supporting research get to name them.

The Chinese Navy Hydrograph­ic Office submitted to the GEBCO Sub-committee on Undersea Feature Names proposed names for up to eight submarine features including a seamount that it wants to call Jujiu in Benham Rise and other parts of the Philippine Sea in the Western Pacific.

All are in the Philippine Basin and within the country’s 200-mile exclusive economic zone, as defined under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea.

The IHO-IOC website, in its record of China’s undersea feature name proposals, shows one filed for a ridge in the Philippine Basin that Beijing says a Chinese vessel called Li Siguang Hao “discovered” in September 2004 following a survey from July to September of the same year.

Beijing reportedly converted the naval vessel into a fishery law enforcemen­t ship called Yuzheng 203 sometime in 2012.

The China Navy Hydrograph­ic Office submitted the undersea feature name proposal, together with bathymetri­c maps, to the IHO-IOC on April 17 last year, seeking to name the feature Shouyang Ridge.

“Shouyang,” according to the applicatio­n, is “another name for Chinese lunar January, i.e. the beginning of the spring when the grim cold air gives way to the all encompassi­ng warmth impercepti­bly. The poetic and pictorial inspiring appellatio­n, created by associatin­g month, climate and the changes of great nature, manifests the wisdom and temperamen­t of people living in the ancient world.”

China’s so-called ninedash-line claim over nearly all of the South China Sea does not extend to the Pacific Ocean. The entire Chinese maritime claim was invalidate­d by the UN-backed Permanent Arbitratio­n Court in The Hague in 2016.

President Duterte ordered all foreign research activities in the area stopped the other day, for still unspecifie­d reasons. A Chinese vessel, however, has completed its research in the area.

Explaining the President’s order, National Security Adviser Hermogenes Esperon said “we simply have to regulate what is within our sovereign rights” even if “we have to share with humanity, with other nations what is in there.” Foreign groups wishing to conduct research or exploratio­n in Philippine Rise are required to get clearance from Esperon.

He stressed the Philippine­s would like to assert its sovereign rights over waters within the country’s 200-mile exclusive economic zone. “It simply means that we value also what we have,” he said.

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