Ceres Summit - 20th May 2100, 04:20 UTCClassical music plays over the speakers as the Federation delegation takes their seats. CEO
Hanzoku begins the summit with a comprehensive
proposal outlining civilian management, survey and mining rights, military codes of conduct, and even suggesting improvements in diplomatic ties between the two polities. After his ten-minute long opening address, there is a short break before the summit moves to discuss the main issue of mineral and colonisation rights in the Main Belt and beyond.
A Federation Administrator, identified by his nameplate as Administrator Jay Hartley of Luna, stands and speaks, "We are in full agreement with CEO Hanzoku's sentiments that the resources of the asteroid belt should be freely developed by humanity, instead of being constrained by conflict between our two powers. However, we are also concerned that one power may fall behind in space exploration and exploitation, to the point where open conflict would seem to be the only recourse to avoid falling into irrelevance, thus negating our efforts here to prevent war."
"To that end, we have drafted a
convention between the Republic and the Federation on legitimate claiming of space bodies and the mutual recognisance of each other's claims, with a mechanism for ensuring both powers are nominally matched in extent of claims. To begin with, we will reaffirm our recognition of the current Republic colonies on 52 Europa, Psyche, Wolf-Harrington, Machholz and Klotho, as long as the Republic does likewise for our colonies on Astraea, Aurelia and Ariadne."
"The meat of the matter which brought us here today was the lack of verification of claims. Under our convention, both powers shall be entitled to send inspectors to verify the other's claims to an asteroid in person, provided that said inspectors are conveyed there by ships of the claiming power, and provided that the inspectors carry just enough equipment to verify that they are on the correct asteroid to prevent trickery. Claims shall be recognised as legitimate if they have at least one installation of any kind (except colonist infrastructure) on the body in question, regardless of the population or lack thereof."
"Both powers shall be matched in number of bodies claimed. At the current moment, the Federation will be entitled to claim two more asteroids immediately to match the Republic's five claims. Thereafter, neither of the powers may have more than one more claim over the other, so if the Republic were to make a sixth claim, it could not make a seventh until the Federation made its sixth claim. To prevent one power unilaterally holding up the development of the asteroid belt, both powers are entitled to continue claiming one additional asteroid every six months after their previous claim if the other power has not matched it in that time."
"With regard to 'moving' colonies on a comet, the current standard of a 10 million km exclusion cordon shall not apply . Within that limit, no military ships may be stationed at a comet colony, although civilian ships will be allowed to pass to the colony, subject to inspection by the power controlling that space. This will preserve the sovereignty of each power as much as possible without unduly hindering the development of TNE-rich comets."
Ceres Accords
Hartley Convention on Claim and Transit Rights
Here asteroid is shorthand for asteroids, trojan asteroids, comets, moons of the inner six planets and dwarf planets
1. Each power will have an equal number of asteroid claims at the time of this accord, verified in the least intrusive manner possible by the other power.
2. Each power may make one more claim at any time if they have equal or lesser number of total claims than the other power. The power with more claims may not make a claim except under point 3.
3. Each power will be entitled to claim at a minimum rate of one asteroid per six months, if the other power has not matched their number of claims in that period.
4. The claiming of an asteroid will be verified in the least intrusive manner possible by the other power, and a legitimate claim is defined as having at least one installation on the body in question, with the exception of purely colonial infrastructure.
5. A claim to a body will include a 10 million km exclusion cordon of space around the body, in which any ships (military or civilian) or the other power may not pass, excepting the circumstances in point 6.
6. In the case of comets and other 'moving' bodies, such an exclusion cordon will not apply at all within 230 million km of the sun, or 230 million km of the current position of Jupiter, and the powers controlling those spaces will be allowed to pass any ships at any distance from the comet colony. The claiming power may not station any military ships at the comet, but is allowed to transit civilian ships within the other power's sphere of influence to their colony, subject to inspection.
Another Federation official, one Administrator Elizabeth Brennan of Federal Aurelia, speaks as well, "We are interested in taking up CEO Hanzoku's offer of selling us their claim to Klotho, for the price of 10,000 tons Duranium and 24 tons Uridium. We will additionally offer the mineral and credit price of however many mines the Republic has on Klotho to purchase them as well, to simplify the handover process. The Federation will of course forfeit the claiming of two more asteroids under Hartley's convention if this deal goes through."
((Well, this is my first time doing so much diplomacy, so if you guys have any questions about the Federation's terms, you can ask OOC. I've decided to split the Summit up into topics, from claiming/transit rights -> civilian management and trade -> survey rights -> military standards to break down the discussion into more manageable parts, though nothing will be signed until the very end of the summit, and you guys can bring the discussion back to previous points at any time.
Also to shed some light on the milieu of this LP, the Republic and the Federation are the
only polities covering all of humanity; there are no neutral states of any sort. That's why the Federation included the verification to be done by inspectors from the other power, instead of setting up an independent international commission or regulatory authority that is common to diplomatic accords today, as any such commission would be powerless and de facto not independent anyway in the setting. Also, the Federation is not a monolithic decision-making entity, there are little separate factions and power blocs within them that I'm RPing, so expect the Federation's behaviour to be occasionally inconsistent rather than perfectly rational powergaming.))