55.5°N 179°WThe International zone of the Sea of Okhotsk (Russian: международная зона Охотского моря|mezhdunarodnaya zona Okhotskogo morya), known by its nickname Peanut Hole, is an area of international waters at the center of the Sea of Okhotsk. From 1991 to 2014 its status was the subject of international disputes. Since March 2014 the Peanut Hole's seabed and subterranea is legally part of the continental shelf of Russia.
The Peanut Hole (named for its shape) was an area about 55km (34miles) wide and 480km (300miles) long, and was surrounded by the exclusive economic zone of Russia (Russian EEZ) extending from the shores of the Kamchatka Peninsula, the Kuril Islands, Sakhalin, and the Russian mainland (Khabarovsk Krai and Magadan Oblast), but was not in Russia's default EEZ because it is more than 200nmi from any coast.
EEZs are not areas of sovereignty, but are areas of certain sovereign rights and functional jurisdiction. Since the Peanut Hole was not in the Russian EEZ, any country could fish there, and some began doing so in large numbers in 1991, removing perhaps as much as one million metric tons of pollock in 1992. This was seen by the Russian Federation as presenting a danger to Russian fish stocks, since the fish move in and out of the Peanut Hole from the Russian EEZ.[1] (This situation is called a "straddling stock", and the problem with it is an illustration of the "tragedy of commons".[2])
In 1993, China, Japan, Poland, Russia and South Korea agreed to stop fishing in the Peanut Hole until the pollock stocks recovered, but without an agreement on how to proceed after that,[3] while the United Nations Straddling Fish Stocks Agreement, which became effective in 2001, created a framework intended to help implement cooperative management of straddling stocks.
The Russian Federation petitioned the United Nations to declare the Peanut Hole to be part of Russia's continental shelf. In November 2013, a United Nations subcommittee accepted the Russian argument, and in March 2014 the full United Nations Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf ruled in favor of the Russian Federation.[4]
There are several other similar relatively small areas of high waters surrounded by EEZs: "Banana Hole" in the Norwegian Sea, surrounded by the EEZs of Norway, Greenland, the Faeroe Islands and Iceland, "Loop Hole" in the Barents Sea, surrounded by Russia and Norway, and the "Donut Hole" in the Bering Sea surrounded by Russia and the United States.[5]