I understand that there are accidents, but when it comes to shipping vessels, they simply don't drop anchor unless they are waiting for port access and have been ordered where to drop anchor. That Ukrainian captain was off by 500m and the shore should have told them they were parking in the wrong place. They have radar.
IDK if the baltic does more micromanaging but in French and British waters no one tells you where to anchor up. There are places designated on charts and marked in the ocean by buoys that are out of the way of traffic lanes near harbours & away from cables or pipelines, but there's nothing stopping ship captains from anchoring up anywhere for any reason beside a fear of being sued to death or running aground. I like the UK regs where they make it pretty clear "there is no legal protection if you did not follow the rules and caused a collision. There is no legal protection if you followed the rules, and in doing so caused a collision." Basically making it clear duty > protocol. Enforcement typically happens after the fact because ocean big patrol ships few. There are plenty of reasons why shipping vessels drop anchor anywhere. Most common besides logistic reasons is just the weather's changed, so plans have had to change on short term notice. Or problems with the engine, crew sick, crew on strike, shortage of harbour/straits pilotage e.t.c.
I sympathise a lot with the Ukrainian captain because drifting 500m off course is pretty damn easy to do if you're navigating by chart and the currents weren't kind enough to agree with your trigonometry, or you were operating a behemoth of a ship as he was. But he made a gaffa and it's really not fair to pin that on harbour staff, since it's not their job to monitor what ships are doing, nor is it practical (the ocean is stupidly vast. Even in fair weather with no noise, the idea of trying to monitor every single ship captain within range of an over the horizon radar in case they do something stupid would make it an impossible, hair loss inducing job. Even if they could see them on radar, there would be nothing to indicate the Maersk was at anchor without physically sending someone over there to inspect it in the middle of rough weather).
The UNCLOS treaty is just the newest treaty and its uniformity makes it easier on all ships than the variety of previous individual treaties. These treaties all offered some form of "innocent passage" clause, for trade and such, but they all essentially mean "move along in an orderly fashion and look innocent or you may be detained". Being within the EEZ isn't different, you have rights to passage under certain conditions and if you appear to violate those conditions they may attempt to board. This is why I said the Baltic has no international waters, it is all territorial and EEZ waters and travel through those waters is allowed conditionally.
Gotta disagree, UNCLOS offers significant protections to all foreign ships right of transit, even warships. "Look innocent or you may be detained" implies states can just detain whatever ship for whatever reason, but countries don't do this because then other countries will (see Iran and their stupid tit for tat abduction of foreign tankers). It's also illegal, for what that's worth. Coastal jurisdiction is restricted to banning the movement of prohibited goods (weapons, drugs e.t.c.), in international waters enforcing certain regulations (against piracy, human trafficking, environmental) and ships threatening the use of force. Denmark itself has areas of territorial waters that under the Copenhagen treaty, are treated as international waters for innocent passage (hence why there are still Russian outbound tankers sailing through Danish waters unimpeded). Similar to how the Bosphorous straits are Turkish territorial waters, but for legal purposes its sovereignty is restricted by the Montreaux convention. And the EEZ is not the same as territorial waters. Territorial waters are sovereign, EEZs are claims - with the latter conferring no legal umbrella to subject foreign ships to the law of the EEZ's nation. This has already been the issue with the cases of one of the Chinese tankers:
The ship now sits idle in international waters but inside Denmark's exclusive economic zone, closely watched by Danish military vessels.
"From the Swedish side we have had contact with the ship and contact with China and said that we want the ship to move towards Swedish waters," Kristersson told a press conference, adding it would help facilitate the investigation.
The Chinese vessel the Yi Peng 3 very safely transited the baltic sea, Denmark's straits and then sailed to Egypt monitored but unmolested by European warships because of this. It ties into what I mentioned earlier where I am annoyed that we afford Chinese vessels all of the protections of the UNCLOS, whilst they themselves are not enforcing it, illegally laying claim to the SCS
I remember this one where 1.5 KM of cable just disappeared and it just happened to be part of a surveillance system.
They should add a livestream cam to the cables, catch them red handed
