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East Timor signs maritime border deal with Australia

  (Agence France-Presse)
United Nations, United States
Wed, March 7, 2018 Published on Mar. 7, 2018 Published on 2018-03-07T13:25:33+07:00

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Then East Timor Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao (left) briefs Australia's Foreign Minister Bob Carr (right) with a map of East Timor during their meeting at the government palace in Dili on Dec. 13, 2012. Carr is on a two-day visit in Dili as UN peacekeepers end their mission in East Timor by the end of December. Then East Timor Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao (left) briefs Australia's Foreign Minister Bob Carr (right) with a map of East Timor during their meeting at the government palace in Dili on Dec. 13, 2012. Carr is on a two-day visit in Dili as UN peacekeepers end their mission in East Timor by the end of December. (Agence France -Presse/Valentino De Sousa)

E

ast Timor signed a treaty with Australia at the United Nations on Tuesday to end a decade-old dispute over their maritime border and potentially unlock billions of dollars in offshore gas revenue.

The treaty is expected to provide a major boost to East Timor, one of Asia's poorest countries, by establishing special arrangements for sharing revenue from the Greater Sunrise offshore gas fields in the Timor Sea.

After signing the treaty during a UN ceremony, Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop told reporters that East Timor stood to gain "substantial benefits" from the deal.

"We are talking billions of dollars over the life of such a resource project," Bishop said.

Discovered in 1974, Greater Sunrise has an estimated worth of between $40 and $50 billion. The offshore fields are located 150 kilometers (93 miles) southeast of East Timor and 450 kilometers northwest of Darwin. 

East Timor's minister for delimitations said development of the gas fields through a pipeline that would reach the south coast of his country would be a "game-changer."

Such a project would have a "transformational impact" on the socioeconomics of the country, where 65 percent of the population of 1.5 million are "young people looking for jobs," said Hermenegildo Augusto Cabral Pereira.

A commission that oversaw negotiations on the treaty will soon release a report on the various options to develop the Greater Sunrise fields.

East Timor, one of Asia's poorest countries, has been in dispute with Australia over the sea border since its independence from Indonesia in 2002.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres witnessed the signing of the treaty, which was the first-ever reached under a special conciliation mechanism of the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.

While details of the revenue-sharing arrangement have not been finalized, Bishop said East Timor would receive the lion's share of revenue -- 70 or 80 percent -- from the development of Greater Sunrise.

The project could also help East Timor boost its standing among foreign investors, said Pereira.

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