Moon Treaty

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Moon Treaty
Agreement Governing the Activities of States on the Moon and Other Celestial Bodies
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Ratifications and signatories of the treaty
  Parties
  Signatories
  Non-parties
Signed December 18, 1979
Location New York, USA
Effective July 11, 1984
Condition 5 ratifications
Signatories 11
Parties 16[1][2] (as of May 2014)
Depositary Secretary-General of the United Nations
Languages English, French, Russian, Spanish, Arabic and Chinese
Moon Treaty at Wikisource

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The Agreement Governing the Activities of States on the Moon and Other Celestial Bodies,[3] better known as the Moon Treaty or Moon Agreement, is an international treaty that turns jurisdiction of all celestial bodies (including the orbits around such bodies) over to the international community. Thus, all activities must conform to international law, including the United Nations Charter.

In practice it is a failed treaty because it has not been ratified by any state that engages in self-launched manned space exploration or has plans to do so (e.g. the United States, some member states of the European Space Agency, Russia (former Soviet Union), People's Republic of China, Japan, and India) since its creation in 1979, and thus has a negligible effect on actual spaceflight. As of 2014, it has been ratified by 16 states.[1]

Content

As a follow-on to the Outer Space Treaty, the Moon Treaty intended to establish a regime for the use of the Moon and other celestial bodies similar to the one established for the sea floor in the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. The treaty would apply to the Moon and to other celestial bodies within the Solar System, other than Earth, including orbits around or other trajectories to or around them.[citation needed]

The treaty makes a declaration that the Moon should be used for the benefit of all states and all peoples of the international community. It also expresses a desire to prevent the Moon from becoming a source of international conflict. To those ends the treaty does the following:[citation needed]

  • Bans any military use of celestial bodies, including weapon testing or as military bases.
  • Bans all exploration and uses of celestial bodies without the approval or benefit of other states under the common heritage of mankind principle (article 11).
  • Requires that the Secretary-General must be notified of all celestial activities (and discoveries developed thanks to those activities).
  • Declares all states have an equal right to conduct research on celestial bodies.
  • Declares that for any samples obtained during research activities, the state that obtained them must consider making part of it available to all countries/scientific communities for research.
  • Bans altering the environment of celestial bodies and requires that states must take measures to prevent accidental contamination.
  • Bans any state from claiming sovereignty over any territory of celestial bodies.
  • Bans any ownership of any extraterrestrial property by any organization or person, unless that organization is international and governmental.
  • Requires all resource extraction and allocation be made by an international regime.

Ratification

Participation in the Moon Treaty
  Parties
  Signatories
  Non-parties

The treaty was finalized in 1979 and entered into force for the ratifying parties in 1984. As of May 2013, 16 states are parties to the treaty,[1] seven of which ratified the agreement and the rest acceded.[1][4] Four additional states have signed but not ratified the treaty.[1][4] The L5 Society and others successfully opposed ratification of the treaty by the United States Senate.[5]

The objection to the treaty by the spacefaring nations is held to be the requirement that extracted resources (and the technology used to that end) must be shared with other nations. The similar regime in the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea is believed to impede the development of such industries on the seabed.[6]

List of parties

State[1][2] Signed Deposited Method
 Australia 7 Jul 1986 Accession
 Austria 21 May 1980 11 Jun 1984 Ratification
 Belgium 29 Jun 2004 Accession
 Chile 3 Jan 1980 12 Nov 1981 Ratification
 Kazakhstan 11 Jan 2001 Accession
 Kuwait 28 Apr 2014 Accession
 Lebanon 12 Apr 2006 Accession
 Mexico 11 Oct 1991 Accession
 Morocco 25 Jul 1980 21 Jan 1993 Ratification
 Netherlands 27 Jan 1981 17 Feb 1983 Ratification
 Pakistan 27 Feb 1986 Accession
 Peru 23 Jun 1981 23 Nov 2005 Ratification
 Philippines 23 Apr 1980 26 May 1981 Ratification
 Saudi Arabia 18 Jul 2012 Accession
 Turkey 29 Feb 2012[7] Accession
 Uruguay 1 Jun 1981 9 Nov 1981 Ratification

List of signatories

State[1][2] Signed
 France 29 Jan 1980
 Guatemala 20 Nov 1980
 India 18 Jan 1982
 Romania 17 Apr 1980

See also

Extraterritorialities
Antarctica
Embassy
Extraterrestrial real estate
International waters
International seabed
Moon
Outer Space
International zone
United Nations
See also International organization

References

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  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Agreement Governing the Activities of States on the Moon and Other Celestial Bodies, Dec. 5, 1979, 1363 U.N.T.S. 3
  4. 4.0 4.1 Status of international agreements relating to activities in outer space as at 1 January 2008 United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs, 2008
  5. Chapter 5: O'Neills Children, Reaching for the High Frontier, The American Pro-Space Movement 1972-84, by Michael A. G. Michaud, National Space Society.
  6. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  7. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links