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49

• Training course held in the Seychelles from 13 to 21 April 2011. Main focus on technical advice

in connection with the submission document. Data fromOSDS provided in this connection.

• Technical advice and support provided to the Republic of Tanzania to finalise the sub-

mission document. Revision of documents and workshops conducted in May, June and

September 2011 (submission January 2012)

• Advice and comments on submission given to Bangladesh (submission February 2011).

• Technical advice provided to Costa Rica about a possible joint submission with Ecuador

and Colombia around the Farralon Plate.

3. Maintain competence and expertise in

developing states until their submission is

examined by the Commission on the Lim-

its of the Continental Shelf (CLCS).

UN General Assembly Resolution 57/141

(paragraph 38)

• Capacity building on extended conti-

nental shelf issues offered to relevant

developing states to promote sustain-

able use of their marine environment

• Annual workshops arranged and online

service provided

• Capacity development offered to, and accepted by, the six West African states under

point 1. Two training sessions held in 2011 and two more planned for 2012.

• Capacity development project in general management of marine areas for developing

states currently under development.

• The regional continental shelf cooperation in the Pacific has been extended to general

boundary delimitation, and the workshop in July 2011 included technical and legal sup-

port for the negotiation of the 22 unresolved boundaries in the region.

• Request from Uruguay and Argentina about revisions of their previous submissions

and possible resubmissions.

4. Further develop the One Stop Data

Shop into a multidisciplinary global ma-

rine resource information database to

serve activities and deliverables of inte-

grated Oceans Management activity (and

in support of external partners)

• Number of partnerships dedicated to

the development of an information da-

tabase (including back-end and front-

end) to support ocean resources and

environmental management and with

particular focus on the continental

shelf and deep sea) secured: 2-3

• The OSDS contains around 17000 public marine surveys, and there has been 5258 ex-

ternal downloads of shapefiles from 1008 unique sides. The new data from the West

African data acquisition programme will be incorporated in OSDS. An agreement with

Ocean Data and Information Network (ODIN) about data sharing is under develop-

ment.

• GRID-Arendal provided data mining and networking for the European Marine Observa-

tion and Data Network (EMODNET). This is a European Commission project aiming at

improved access to high quality marine data. The focus in 2011 has been on identifica-

tion of data from Lebanon, Israel, Turkey and North Africa.

• GRID-Arendal has been contracted to develop the reporting system for the UN Regular

Process. Main activities will start in 2012 (se B1), so data has not been provided yet.

• Global Marine Resource Information

Database (branded as OCEANIDS)

based on emerging issues requiring

specific data needs expanded.

• Data support to UN Regular Process

provided.

• Link to UNEP’s EDIP (Environmental

Data and Indicators Platform) initiative

explored and expanded.

Collaborating with partners: Legal Department of the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Norwegian Petroleum Directorate, SK, ECOWAS, IOC, CLCS, UNEP Regional Seas,

Geoscience Australia, SOPAC, Commonwealth Secretariat

Countries/regions assisted: West Africa, Somalia, Tanzania, Seychelles, Madagascar, Chile, Argentina, Uruguay, Bangladesh and the Pacific states