Graphic detail | Daily chart

Drops in the ocean: France’s marine territories

France adopted four decrees to extend its continental shelf

By The Data Team

FRANCE made an audacious land-grab in 2015, albeit under the sea. It adopted four decrees in September 2015 that redefined the external limits of its continental shelf (the seabed and the soil under the seabed that can be included in a country’s landmass). Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZ), which grant special rights to resources such as fishing and mineral extraction in an area extending 200 nautical miles (370km) from a country’s coast, are enshrined in the 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea, which has been ratified by 167 countries. Article 76 of the convention allows any state to extend its control up to 350 miles if their application is accepted. But the extension only applies to the seabed and so excludes fishing rights. France demonstrated an increase was appropriate to its territories of French Guiana, Martinique, Guadeloupe, New Caledonia and the Kerguelen Islands, adding a total of 579,000km2 to its surface area.

More from Graphic detail

Is America’s weed habit dangerous?

Our analysis of the data

Hong Kong smothers dissent ahead of the Tiananmen anniversary

Data show the extent to which repression has grown


Despite flaws, South Africa’s democracy is stronger than its neighbours’

EIU’s democracy index shows just how bad the situation in Africa is


More from Graphic detail

Is America’s weed habit dangerous?

Our analysis of the data

Hong Kong smothers dissent ahead of the Tiananmen anniversary

Data show the extent to which repression has grown


Despite flaws, South Africa’s democracy is stronger than its neighbours’

EIU’s democracy index shows just how bad the situation in Africa is


Sudan: the war the world forgot

These charts and maps lay out the scale of the country’s catastrophe

How will Britain vote on July 4th?

Spoiler: it is not looking good for Rishi Sunak

Unexpectedly, the cost of big cyber-attacks is falling

Natural disasters tend to do far more harm than man-made code