639 
16. Togo: Petroleum Press Service, June 1968 at 204. 
17. Tunisia: Petroleum Press Service, Jan. 1967 at 33. 
18. Turkey: Three offshore concessions were in effect in 1966. 
19. Yemen: One offshore concession was granted in 1961. 
. States (whether or not parties to the Convention) which have granted 
offshore concessions, or undertaken development, in areas pro- 
visionally identified as including waters deeper than 200 meters 
Note a: This listing is based in part on examination of published 
concession agreements, concession maps, decrees, etc., 
and in part on unpublished information from sources be- 
lieved to be reliable. 
Note b: In countries marked with an asterisk (*), the seaward 
boundary of concessions appears to approximate the 100- 
fathom isobath, but lies beyond that isobath in one or 
more areas. 
The 14 
Note c: In countries marked (#), the seaward boundary of at least 
one concession appears to be beyond the 200 metre isobath 
and more than 50 nautical miles from shore, 
1. Australia # 16. Malaysia # 
2. British Honduras * 17. Mauritania * 
3. Canada # 18, Norway # 
4. Cuba (concession out- 19. Oman # 
standing in 1957) 20. Panama * 
5. Denmark * 21. Peru * # 
6. Equatorial Guinea 22. Philippines * 
7. Ethiopia * 23. Senegal # 
8. Gabon # . 24. Spanish Sahara 
9. Ghana 25. Sudan 
10. Guyana # 26. Surinam # 
11. Honduras * #° Cn ee ninidad 
12. Indonesia * # ° 28. Turkey 
13. Italy 29. United,Kingdom 
14. Jamaica * # 05 AOGiDs rg 
15, Japan # OG Wo tio Slo 185 
. On March 13, 1969, the U.S.S.R. representative stated in the United 
Nations Committee on the Peaceful Uses of the Seabed Beyond the 
Limits of National Jurisdiction that, "In the Soviet Union drilling was 
being carried out in the Caspian Sea at depths of from 300 to 600 me- 
tres. . . .'' (U.N, Press Release GA/3929, 13 March 1969, at p. 4). 
