AERIAL VIEW of fishing boats coming together at Qingyu fishing port at Ganyu district, waiting for the end of 2019 closed fishing season, in Lianyungang, China. 鈥 REUTERS FILE PHOTO

By Philippe Le Billon and Zelda Ladefoged

Delegates are meeting in New York for the third session of the on the Agreement on Marine Biological Diversity of Areas beyond National Jurisdiction (BBNJ), also known as the .

After nearly 20 years of negotiations, United Nations member states adopted the treaty in June 2023. When it opened for signatures that September, 67 countries signed immediately. In January 2026, Morocco and Sierra Leone then became the 60th and 61st states to ratify, .

The treaty is now international law. At the time of writing, 145 countries have signed and 85 have ratified.

The third session of the preparatory commission must now work through how the treaty will actually function. A key question in corridor conversations is: who should host the secretariat?

Every international treaty needs an . The High Seas Treaty is no different. It requires a secretariat to co-ordinate between parties, service meetings, and manage information.

For months, Belgium and Chile were the only contenders, their bids quietly taking shape in the background of treaty negotiations. Then, in January 2026, with Xiamen as the . That announcement changed the optics of the negotiations.

THE GEOGRAPHY OF DIPLOMACY
Where that secretariat sits may be seen as an administrative question, a matter of office space and convenience. .

The location of secretariats, and in general, shapes how they function in practice. It influences who gravitates toward the institution and which delegations can afford to attend. It sways what issues get quietly elevated and what institutional culture takes root. Location is a form of proximity and .

Belgium has , pointing to its dense ecosystem of international organizations and more than 300 diplomatic missions.

Chile has on an equity argument: Latin America has never hosted a universal-membership environmental secretariat and the .

China鈥檚 late entry adds a strong contender to the process.

CONCERNS ABOUT CHINA鈥橲 INFLUENCE
China has more at stake in how the high seas are governed than almost any other state. and has faced sustained international criticism over . It also holds through the International Seabed Authority than any other nation.

It has been among the most assertive in defending its maritime claims, , including through declaring a in the South China Sea.

Though fishing controversially remains largely outside its scope, the , most notably through enforceable marine protected areas and new environmental standards for activities that have historically escaped meaningful oversight.

For some observers, that combination makes the secretariat bid difficult to reconcile. Lyn Goldsworthy, a veteran Southern Ocean researcher at the University of Tasmania, has pointed to China鈥檚 reluctance over the creation of marine protected areas in the Antarctic high seas. 鈥淚f they are in that influential [position],鈥 , 鈥渢hey can slow things down.鈥

Analysts at India鈥檚 National Maritime Foundation have raised the further risk , the idea that formally neutral administrative practices can quietly embed particular governance norms over time.

However, the case is less clear-cut than it looks.

GIVING CHINA A STAKE IN THE TREATY鈥橲 SUCCESS
Skepticism about China鈥檚 bid is understandable, but the case against it is weaker than it first appears. Begin with the international picture. Li Shuo, director of the China Climate Hub at the Asia Society Policy Institute, has described the , one that signals the Chinese want to play an active role in shaping international rules.

If China鈥檚 institutional credibility is visibly tied to BBNJ鈥檚 success, it has more reasons to want the treaty to function. China has ratified the agreement. , the principal instrument targeting illegal fishing, despite late accession and uneven implementation.

Its navy is the . Its financial, infrastructural, and human capacity to run a serious international institution is not in question.

There is possibly an even more important dimension. Scholars focused on Chinese fisheries governance have documented the , a gap that domestic regulation has struggled to close.

International treaty commitments can, in principle, . Whether the BBNJ treaty might operate that way for China is an open question, but it is one worth taking seriously.

A China genuinely embedded in the framework may behave differently within it than a China left on the outside. The UN鈥檚 to protect 30% of the world鈥檚 oceans by 2030 depends heavily on what happens in the high seas. So does any serious effort to crack down on illegal fishing or establish enforceable marine protected areas in international waters.

None of this is a straightforward argument for or against China hosting. It is a narrower claim: that the case against it is weaker than it first appears because it assumes that Chinese involvement would inevitably hollow out the treaty鈥檚 environmental ambition. That assumption is not obviously correct.

What conditions that would make the treaty work rather than fail are not mysterious. The secretariat would need genuine independence in its leadership. Governance structures would need to be transparent and enforceable. The treaty culture would need to be robust enough to resist pressure from the host state and to be responsive to all parties. These are demanding conditions. They are also conditions being negotiated right now.

WHAT IS ACTUALLY AT STAKE
The formal decision on where to locate the secretariat will be taken at the first Conference of the Parties, . The institutional architecture being built at PrepCom 3 will shape what kind of institution the secretariat becomes before that vote is ever taken.

The governance rules and independence provisions being drafted now will determine whether the hosting question is a story about institutional capture or about the diligent implementation of a treaty that covers nearly half the planet.

The BBNJ agreement is a test of something larger than . It is a test of whether international institutions can still function as common ground as the United States .

Where the secretariat sits is not a technicality. It is about whether the high seas remain a global common in practice, not just in name, through an institution operating with independence, credibility, and authority.

 

is a professor in the Geography Department and School of Public Policy & Global Affairs at the University of British Columbia. is a Master鈥檚 student, Geography, at the University of British Columbia.