Region Caribbean Sea Atlantic and Indian Oceans and
Indian Oceans
Pacific Ocean Country Algeria Algeria on 17 April 2018 established an exclusive economic zone (EEZ) off its coasts by Presidential Decree No. 18-96 of 2 Rajab 1439 corresponding to 20 March 2018. The permanent mission of Spain to the United Nations on 27 July 2018 declared its disagreement with the EEZ announced by Algeria and that the government of Spain indicated its willingness to enter into negotiations with the government of Algeria with a view to reaching a mutually acceptable agreement on the outer limits of their respective exclusive economic zones, The same was done by the Italian mission on 28 November 2018. The two countries indicated that the Algerian measure had been taken unilaterally and without consulting them. On 25 November 2018, the Algerian Ministry of Foreign Affairs sent an oral note in response to the Spanish protest, explaining that the Algerian government does not recognize the largely exorbitant coordinates contained in Royal Decree 236/2013, which overlap with the coordinates of Presidential Decree n° 18–96 establishing an exclusive economic zone off the coast of Algeria. The Algerian government wished to emphasize that the unilateral delimitation carried out by Spain is not in conformity with the letter of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea and has not taken into consideration the configuration, the specific characteristics, and the special circumstances of the Mediterranean Sea, in particular for the case of the two countries whose coasts are located face to face, as well as the objective rules and relevant principles of international law to govern the equitable delimitation of the maritime areas between Algeria and Spain, in accordance with article 74 of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. Algeria expressed its willingness to negotiate for a just solution. On 20 June 2019, a communication from Algeria was sent. It was addressed to the Italian embassy and the Spanish embassy in Algiers to show their eligibility in Algeria's exclusive economic zone.
Argentina 's exclusive economic zones, including its
territorial claims (the Falklands and South Georgia, etc. plus its Antarctic claim) Considering the maritime areas claimed, the total area of Argentina reaches 3,849,756 km2. The recognized Argentine EEZ area is 1,159,063 km2.
Australia Australia's exclusive economic zone was declared on 1 August 1994, and extends from 12 to 200 nautical miles from the coastline of Australia and its
external territories, except where a maritime
delimitation agreement exists with another state. To the 12 nautical miles boundary is Australia's
territorial waters. Australia has the third largest exclusive economic zone, behind France and the United States, but ahead of Russia, with a total area of 8,148,250 square kilometres, which actually exceeds its land territory. The United Nations
Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf (CLCS) confirmed, in April 2008, Australia's rights over an additional 2.5 million square kilometres of seabed beyond the limits of Australia's EEZ. but these claims were deferred on Australia's request. However, Australia's EEZ from its Antarctic Territory is approximately 2 million square kilometres. The latter generally extend only 12 nautical miles from the shore but also include inland marine waters such as
Hudson Bay (about across), the
Gulf of Saint Lawrence and the internal waters of the
Arctic Archipelago.
Chile Chile's EEZ includes areas around the
Desventuradas Islands,
Easter Island, and the
Juan Fernández Islands. In 2020 and 2022, Chile submitted its partial claims to the United Nations Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf (CLCS) to extend its maritime continental margin.
China The first figure excludes all disputed waters, while the last figure indicates China's claimed boundaries, and does not take into account adjacent powers' claims.
Croatia Croatia proclaimed
Ecological and Fisheries Protection Zone in 2003, but it was not enforced toward other European Union states especially Italy and Slovenia. The zone was upgraded to EEZ in 2021 together with Italy and Slovenia. Territorial waters has 18,981 km2, while
internal waters located within the baseline cover an additional 12,498 km2, and EEZ covers 24,482 km2 for a total of 55,961 km2.
Cyprus Cyprus EEZ covers 98,707 square km (38,100 square miles). Cyprus' EEZ borders those of
Greece,
Turkey,
Syria,
Lebanon,
Israel and
Egypt.
Denmark The Kingdom of Denmark includes the constituent country (
selvstyre) of
Greenland and the constituent country (
hjemmestyre) of the
Faroe Islands.
Ecuador Area: 1,077,231 km2
France Due to its numerous
overseas departments and territories scattered on all oceans of the planet, France possesses one of the largest EEZs in the world, covering . [France does not have the largest maritime space, that title belongs to the US followed by France and then Australia, even the official limitesmaritimes.gouv.fr link contradicts that claim] The EEZ of France covers approximately 7% of the total surface of all the EEZs of the world, whereas the land area of the French Republic is only 0.45% of the total land area of Earth.
Germany Germany declared the establishment of its exclusive economic zone in the North and Baltic Seas on 1 January 1995. The relevant German legal provisions that are applicable within the EEZ include the Maritime Task Act (Seeaufgabengesetz) from 1965, the Maritime Facilities Act (Seeanlagengesetz) from 2017, and prior to that the Sea Facilities Ordinance (Seeanlagenverordnung) from 1997, the Federal Mining Act (Bundesberggesetz) and the Regional Planning Act (Raumordnungsgesetz). The German EEZ has an area of 32,982 km2. About 70% of the EEZ covers Germany's entire North Sea area, while some 29% encompasses the Baltic Sea area.
Greece Greece forms the southernmost part of the
Balkan peninsula in the
Mediterranean Sea. It includes many small islands which vary between 1,200 and 6,000 in the
Aegean Sea and the
Ionian Sea. The largest islands are
Crete,
Euboea,
Lesbos,
Rhodes and
Chios. Greece's EEZ is bordered to the west by
Albania and
Italy, to the south by
Libya and
Egypt, and to the east by
Cyprus and
Turkey.
India 's exclusive economic zones India is currently seeking to extend its EEZ to 350 miles.
Indonesia 's exclusive economic zone Indonesia has the 6th largest exclusive economic zone in the world. The total size is . It claims an EEZ of 200 nautical miles from its shores. This is due to the 13,466 islands of the
Indonesian Archipelago. It has the
2nd largest coastline of 54,720 km (34,000 mi). The five main islands are:
Sumatra,
Java,
Borneo,
Sulawesi, and
Western New Guinea. There are two major island groups (
Nusa Tenggara and the
Maluku Islands) and sixty smaller island groups.
Ireland Since independence, Ireland's territorial waters were limited to . In 1964, her
territorial waters were extended to from the baseline covering an area of , although several European countries retained fishing rights between . In 1976, Ireland's exclusive economic zone was extended out to , increasing her maritime area to . In 1996, Ireland ratified the
United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) which allows her to claim the
continental shelf out to from the baseline. Ireland has made claims under UNCLOS for the Porcupine Abyssal Plain in 2005, the seabed of the Celtic Sea and Bay of Biscay in 2006, and also the Hatton Rockall area in 2009. She was awarded the Porcupine Abyssal claim in 2007 adding of seabed to the State's continental shelf. The other two claims are still under discussion with neighbouring states; the Celtic Sea and Bay of Biscay with France, Spain and the United Kingdom; and the Hatton Rockall area with Denmark, Iceland and the United Kingdom. In 2006, Ireland claimed her
contiguous zone out to from the baseline.
Israel In 2010, an agreement was signed with
Cyprus concerning the limit of territorial waters between Israel and Cyprus at the maritime halfway point, a clarification essential for safeguarding Israel's rights to oil and underwater gas reservoirs. The agreement was signed in Nicosia by Israeli Infrastructure Minister
Uzi Landau and the Cypriot Foreign Minister Markos Kyprianou. The two countries agreed to cooperate in the development of any cross-border resources discovered and to negotiate an agreement on dividing joint resources.
Italy Italy has an EEZ of . It claims an EEZ of 200 nautical miles from its shores. Japan has disputes over its EEZ boundaries with all its Asian neighbors (China, Russia,
South Korea, and
Taiwan). The above, and relevant maps at the Sea Around Us Project both indicate Japan's claimed boundaries, and do not take into account the claims of adjacent jurisdictions. Japan also refers to various categories of "shipping area" – Smooth Water Area, Coasting Area, Major or Greater Coasting Area, Ocean Going Area – but it is unclear whether these are intended to have any territorial or economic implications.
Malaysia Mexico Mexico's exclusive economic zones cover a total surface area of 3,269,386 km2, which is approximately fifteen times the land area of the country. Sources vary significantly on the size of New Zealand's EEZ; for example, a recent government publication gave the area as roughly 4,300,000 km2. These figures are for the EEZ of New Zealand proper, and do not include the EEZs of other territories in the
Realm of New Zealand (the
Cook Islands,
Niue,
Tokelau, and the
Ross Dependency).
North Korea The exclusive economic zone of
North Korea stretches 200
nautical miles from its basepoints in both the
West Sea (Yellow Sea) and the
Sea of Japan. The EEZ was declared in 1977 after North Korea had contested the validity of the
Northern Limit Lines (NLL) set up after the
Korean War as maritime borders. The EEZ has not been codified in law and North Korea has never specified its coordinates, making it difficult to determine its specific scope. In the West Sea, the EEZ remains unspecified in the
Korea Bay because China has not determined its own EEZ in the area. The border between the North Korean and South Korean EEZs in the West Sea cannot be determined because of potential overlap and disputes over certain islands. In the Sea of Japan, the North Korean EEZ can be approximated to be
trapezoidal-shaped. The border between North Korea and Russia's respective EEZs is the only such border that has been determined in East Asia. Here, the EEZ does not cause many problems, even with regards to South Korea, because the sea is not thought to be rich in resources.
Norway 's exclusive economic zones, including the
dependency of
Bouvet Island The Kingdom of Norway has a large exclusive economic zone of 819,620 km2 around its coast. The country has a fishing zone of 1,878,953 km2, including fishing zones around
Svalbard and
Jan Mayen. In April 2009, the United Nations Commission for the Limits of the Continental Shelf approved Norway's claim to an additional 235,000 square kilometres of continental shelf. The commission found that Norway and Russia both had valid claims over a portion of the shelf in the Barents Sea.
Pakistan Area: The coast of Pakistan is long, extending from
Sir Creek in the east to
Gwatar Bay in the west and the EEZ extends up to which is equivalent to more than 30% of its land area and ranks sixty-sixth in the world by area. Pakistan had an EEZ of before their case was accepted by UNCLCS.
Pakistan Navy with the help of the National Oceanographic Organization (NIO) initiated the continental shelf case at ministerial level in 1995. On 26 Aug 2013, a seven-member sub-commission with members from Japan, China, Mozambique, Kenya, Denmark, Georgia and Argentina was formulated at UNCLCS to evaluate the technical details of Pakistan's case and after a year accepted Pakistan's claim. On 13 March 2015, UN Commission on the Limits of Continental Shelf (UNCLCS) accepted recommendations for extension of the outer limits of the continental shelf on Pakistan's case so far 80 countries had submitted claims to UNCLCS out of which recommendations of 22 countries including Pakistan had been finalised. It was a historic event in the country's history when Pakistan became the first country in the region to have its continental shelf extended to 350 nm. Some of the claimed territories overlapped the Omani claim. It is believed that the verdict in favour of Pakistan was announced after successful negotiation with Oman.
Peru Area: 857,000 km2
Philippines The
Philippines' EEZ covers .
Poland The Polish EEZ covers the area of within the
Baltic Sea.
Portugal 's Exclusive Economic Zones plus submitted Extended Continental Shelf to the UN Portugal has the
20th largest EEZ in the world. Presently, it is divided in three non-contiguous sub-zones: •
Continental Portugal 327,667 km2 •
Azores 953,633 km2 •
Madeira 446,108 km2 • Total : 1,727,408 km2 Portugal submitted a claim to extend its jurisdiction over an additional 2.15 million square kilometres of the adjacent continental shelf in May 2009, resulting in an area with a total of more than 3,877,408 km2. The submission, as well as a detailed map, can be found in the Task Group for the extension of the Continental Shelf website. Spain previously objected to the EEZ's southern border, maintaining that it should be drawn halfway between
Madeira and the
Canary Islands. But Portugal exercises sovereignty over the
Savage Islands, a small archipelago north of the Canaries, claiming an EEZ border further south. Spain has no longer disputed the Portuguese claim since 2015.
Romania Area: 23,627 km2
Russia Russia's exclusive economic zone, the world's fourth largest, is composed of: • Kaliningrad (Baltic Sea) – 11,634 km2 • Saint Petersburg (Baltic Sea) – 12,759 km2 • Barents Sea – 1,308,140 km2 • Black Sea (without the Crimean EEZ) – 66,854 km2 • Pacific – 3,419,202 km2 • Siberia – 3,277,292 km2 • Total – 8,095,881 km2
Senegal 's exclusive economic zone
Area: 158,861 km2
Somalia 's exclusive economic zone
Area: 825,052 km2
South Africa South Africa's EEZ includes both that next to the African mainland and that around the
Prince Edward Islands, totalling 1,535,538 km2. The United Kingdom has the world's
fifth-largest exclusive economic zone of square km. It comprises the EEZs surrounding the United Kingdom, the
Crown Dependencies, and the
British Overseas Territories. The figure does not include the EEZ of the
British Antarctic Territory. The EEZ associated with the
Falkland Islands and
South Georgia are disputed by
Argentina. The EEZ of the
Chagos Archipelago, also known as the
British Indian Ocean Territory, is also disputed with
Mauritius which considers the archipelago as a part of its territory. And the EEZ around
Gibraltar is disputed by
Spain, which claims the territory. † A part of the overseas territory of , which together has an EEZ of 1,641,294 square km.
United States The United States' exclusive economic zone is the largest in the world, covering 11,351,000 km2. Areas of its EEZ are located in three oceans as well as the
Gulf of Mexico, and the
Caribbean Sea. Note, the totals in the table actually add up to 12,234,403 square km and 4,723,705 square miles.
Vietnam Vietnam claims an exclusive economic zone (EEZ) of with 200 nautical miles from its shores. These figures do not include the claimed EEZ areas of the
Paracel Islands and the
Spratly Islands. Vietnam has disputes mainly with the
People's Republic of China due to the
nine-dash line. ==Countries with the most distant EEZs==