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Timor Gap

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The Timor Gap is an area of the Timor Sea between Australia and Timor Island . The island is divided between independent East Timor and West Timor province of Indonesia .

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19-552: The Timor Gap is part of the Australia–East Timor border , Australia–Indonesia border , and East Timor–Indonesia border . It is 480 km (300 statute miles) wide. Australia and Indonesia negotiated the border in 1972 and the Timor gap is part of the line they could not define because Portugal , who governed colonial East Timor then, declined to participate in the negotiations until the conclusion of UNCLOS negotiations, due to

38-410: A continental shelf boundary agreed between Timor-Leste and Indonesia meets the 1972 Seabed Treaty boundary at a point to the west of point A18 on the 1972 Seabed Treaty Boundary, the continental shelf boundary shall be adjusted so that it proceeds in a geodesic line from point TA-11 in the 2018 Treaty (at 9° 42' 21.49" South and 128° 28' 35.97" East), to point A18. But this shall not come into force before

57-525: A financial framework and international legal basis for development of the field. The agreement deemed 20.1% of the resources of the Greater Sunrise field as lying within the JPDA, attributing 20.1% of production from it to the JPDA and 79.9% to Australia. With East Timor getting 90% of the revenue of the JPDA, it effectively was only going to receive 18.1% of the revenue from the field. This share ratio

76-507: A treaty had been signed regarding the border and the exploitation of the Greater Sunrise gas field. The agreed boundary would follow the median line between the two countries. The 2018 Maritime Boundaries Treaty formalized the agreement reached by Australia and Timor Leste on their maritime boundaries. The two countries had failed to reach agreement on a preferred option for development of the Sunrise/Troubadour field, and annexes to

95-756: Is officially known as the Agreement between the Government of Australia and the Government of the Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste relating to the Unitisation of the Sunrise and Troubadour Fields . The Sunrise International Unitisation Agreement (Sunrise IUA) was made to enable the exploitation of the Sunrise and Troubador petroleum and gas fields in the Timor Sea , together known as

114-730: The Timor Sea Treaty with Australia. This treaty practically puts East Timor in the place of Indonesia in the Timor Gap Treaty, except that the ratio of revenue distribution in the Joint Petroleum Development Area, known as the Zone of Cooperation under the 1989 treaty, was changed to 90:10 in favour of East Timor. The 2002 treaty provided for the future "unitisation" - treating a gas or oil field which straddles one or several borders as one unit - of

133-695: The Treaty on Certain Maritime Arrangements in the Timor Sea (CMATS). Foreign Minister Alexander Downer , using a power invoked only six times in its history, invoked a "national interest" exemption clause to fast-track ratification of the CMATS treaty through the Parliament without scrutiny by its Joint Standing Committee on Treaties . On March 7, 2018, Australia and East Timor announced that

152-543: The 19th of January 2000 The UN Temporary Administration agency for East Timor UNTAET signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Australia to maintain the existing border agreement with Australia so as to allow continued development of the Timor Gap to ensure the financial future of the new country. The decision to maintain the historical agreement with Australia that had been negotiated by Indonesia caused great frustration to many Timorese. Numerous negotiations to determine

171-490: The Greater Sunrise field. The Greater Sunrise field straddles the border between the joint petroleum development area (JPDA) established under the Timor Sea Treaty and Australian territorial waters as determined by the 1972 seabed boundary agreement between Australia and Indonesia. Unitisation of the field would enable it to be treated as one as far as exploitation, regulation, revenue taxation, management and other purposes are concerned, giving certainty to investors by providing

190-490: The Greater Sunrise gas field, of which only 20% was located within the JPDA while the rest was deemed to be in Australian territory. In East Timor's view, this distribution could be disputed as it did not recognise the borders, drawn between Australia and Indonesia, which placed the bulk of Greater Sunrise in Australian territory. On 20 February 2007, East Timor's parliament agreed to ratify the agreement with Australia over

209-514: The Timor Sea Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Category:Australia–East_Timor_border&oldid=965830132 " Categories : Borders of Australia Borders of East Timor Australia–East Timor relations Maritime boundaries International borders Hidden category: Misplaced Pages categories named after borders Sunrise International Unitization Agreement This agreement

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228-475: The Treaty set out procedures for achieving this. Article 3 of the 2018 treaty on maritime boundaries between Australia and Timor-Leste provides for adjustment of the continental shelf boundary between the two countries following settlement of that boundary between Indonesia and Timor-Leste. If those countries agree to an endpoint to their continental shelf boundary west of point A18 on the 1972 Seabed Treaty Boundary,

247-630: The UN, the people of Timor nor by the Portuguese, who continued to see it as an illegally occupied territory. In 1989 after more than a decade of Indonesian occupation, Australia and Indonesia agreed that Indonesia's ongoing occupation of Timor removed the need to include Portugal in any further negotiations and went on to bilaterally negotiate the Timor Gap Treaty . On 30 August 1999 a UN sponsored referendum saw East Timor chose independence. On

266-700: The commercial depletion of the Greater Sunrise Fields. 9°S 127°E  /  9°S 127°E  / -9; 127 Australia%E2%80%93East Timor border Help (Redirected from Australia–East Timor border ) Pages in category "Australia–East Timor border" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total. This list may not reflect recent changes . S Sunrise International Unitization Agreement T Timor Gap Timor Gap Treaty Timor Sea Timor Sea Treaty Treaty on Certain Maritime Arrangements in

285-464: The continental shelf boundary between Australia and Timor-Leste shall be adjusted so that it proceeds in a geodesic line from point TA-2 in the 2018 Treaty (at 11° 24' 00.61" South and 126° 18' 22.48" East), to point A18 (at 18 10° 37' South and 125° 41' East). The Treaty provides that this shall not come into force before the commercial depletion of the Laminaria and Corallina Fields. In the event that

304-414: The extremely complex nature of both international law and the complex geographical problems posed. Australia and Indonesia each posed different delimitation boundaries on their borders, while Portugal chose to abstain until a formal determination of an appropriate method for delimitation could be discerned. East Timor was later invaded and annexed by Indonesia in 1975. This annexation was not recognised by

323-575: The management of oil and gas resources in the Greater Sunrise field in the Timor Sea. The Australian and East Timor governments formally exchanged notes in Dili on 23 February 2007 to bring into force the two treaties that provided the legal and fiscal framework for the development of the Greater Sunrise gas field in the Timor Sea. The notes covered the Sunrise International Unitization Agreement (Sunrise IUA) and

342-506: The ownership of the tens of billions of dollars' worth of oil and gas located on the seabed of the Timor Sea , including completing the undefined boundary known as the Timor Gap, were held between Australia and East Timor from 2002 onwards. During this time Australia and international oil companies were accused of pressuring East Timor to accept a petroleum revenue-sharing formula while deferring permanent boundary resolution and foregoing legal avenues. On its independence day, East Timor signed

361-534: Was amended to both Australia and East Timor getting equal share of the upstream revenue from the field with the signing of the Treaty on Certain Maritime Arrangements in the Timor Sea (CMATS) in 2006. By virtue of this, this agreement is "read together" with CMATS and the Timor Sea Treaty . The Sunrise IUA was signed in Dili , East Timor on 6 March 2003 by then Australian Minister for Foreign Affairs Alexander Downer and Ana Pessoa , East Timor's Minister of State for

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