Single Framework Contract for the Provision of Technical, Legal, Scientific and Logistical Support for the Ratification and Early Implementation of the High Seas Treaty

The Agreement on the Conservation and Sustainable Use of Marine Biological Diversity of Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction (BBNJ Agreement), often referred to as the High Seas Treaty, represents the most significant development in international ocean governance since UNCLOS. It establishes a comprehensive legal framework to protect biodiversity in areas beyond national jurisdiction through four interconnected pillars:

  1. Marine genetic resources, including the fair and equitable sharing of benefits;
  2. Area based management tools, including marine protected areas;
  3. Environmental impact assessments; and
  4. Capacity building and the transfer of marine technology


On 19 September 2025, the High Seas Treaty reached and surpassed the milestone of 60 state ratifications needed to trigger its entry into force. Subsequently, on 17 January 2026, the Agreement entered into force, bringing into effect legally-binding rules for the sustainable use and management of marine resources in the high seas. 

The European Climate, Infrastructure and Environment Executive Agency (CINEA), on behalf of the European Commission and in particular the Directorate General for Maritime Affairs and Fisheries (DG MARE), published a call for tenders for the establishment of a Single Framework Contract for the provision of technical, legal, scientific and logistical assistance.

The contract was awarded to a consortium of specialist partners, led by Landell Mills. Blue Pangolin Consulting provides technical oversight, with Francis Staub serving as Technical Director to ensure quality assurance and strategic coherence across assignments.

The contract ensures that the EU is equipped to lead during the Preparatory Commission phase, contribute effectively to the first Conference of the Parties, and prepare the necessary legislative and policy measures for implementation within the EU and in partnership with third countries.

Through political dialogue support, targeted studies and dedicated legal and policy advisory services, the Single Framework Contract aims to strengthen the EU’s leadership in global ocean governance and supports the effective, science based and equitable implementation of the BBNJ Agreement.

Overview

  • Timeline: 36-months
  • Budget: €4,700,000
  • Objectives: The following specific objectives will be implemented:
    • To provide logistical support to organise political and technical events, such as workshops and political dialogues, including in support of the BBNJ High Ambition Coalition (HAC);
    • To provide technical and scientific support to exchanges among stakeholders, parties and workshops and side events;
    • To provide legal and policy support in developing legislation and preparing for exchanges, meetings and negotiations; and
    • To undertake studies, including possible impact assessment studies and pilot projects.

Latest news
from the project

Project
Kick-off Meeting
December 2024

Landell Mills, as the lead contractor, and represented by Simon Foxwell, Tamika Hull and Harriet Bull, alongside Francis Staub from Blue Pangolin Consulting, attended the contract kick-off meeting at DG MARE in Brussels for the "Support to the Ratification and Early Implementation of the High Seas Treaty".
Launch of SC1: Study supporting the development of an EU legal instrument implementing the BBNJ Agreement (MGR)
February 2025

Specific Contract 1 will aim to support the European Commission, especially DG MARE and DG ENV, in preparing a future EU Directive to implement the BBNJ Agreement. The Directive will regulate environmental impact assessments for activities in areas beyond national jurisdiction, help protect marine biodiversity, and address certain activities related to marine genetic resources and their digital sequence information.
Re-launch of the
BBNJ High Ambition Coalition
June 2025

On 9 June 2025, The EU co-hosted the high-level event “Celebrating High Seas Action” alongside the High Seas Alliance, IUCN and other partners during the Third UN Ocean Conference in Nice. A major highlight was the formal relaunch of the BBNJ High Ambition Coalition, now co-chaired by Palau, Seychelles, and the European Union, aiming to drive urgent ratification and fair and equitable implementation of the BBNJ Agreement. Several government representatives announced imminent or same-day ratifications, signalling clear political will.
The BBNJ High Ambition Coalition
launches the High Ambition Coalition declaration
May 2025

On 28 May 2025, the BBNJ HAC launched the "High Ambition Coalition declaration" which sets out the shared commitment to protecting biodiversity beyond national jurisdiction through rapid and ambitious implementation of the BBNJ Treaty. The declaration highlights the share commitments to; ratify the BBNJ Treaty as soon as possible, implement the Treaty's provisions ambitiously, fairly and effectively, promote science-based decision making Ensure equitable sharing of benefits from marine genetic resources, and work collaboratively to protect High Seas biodiversity.
SC4 announces in-person
workshop at the Third BBNJ Symposium, Rio
March 2026

On 13 March 2026, following the Third BBNJ Symposium, Blue Pangolin Consulting, Landell Mills, and the CBTMT Technical Lead, will host an in-person workshop focusing on "Building a Clearing-House Mechanism for Knowledge and Technology Exchange workshop". The workshop will explore how to operationalise the CBTMT framework, what marine technology encompasses under Article 1(10), how to coordinate CBTMT across the substantive pillars of the BBNJ Agreement, avoiding duplication and fragmentation, and how the Clearing House Mechanism under Article 51 can support these implementation challenges.

The
Consortium

The
Specific Contracts

The Single Framework Contract is currently implementing 5 Specific Contracts. Each Specific Contract addresses a distinct technical or policy priority under the Agreement, collectively strengthening the EU’s legal preparedness, scientific foundations and strategic engagement across all four pillars of the High Seas Treaty:

Specific Contract 1: Study supporting the development of an EU legal instrument implementing the BBNJ Agreement (Marine Genetic Resources and Environmental Impact Assessments)

Overview

The study aims to support the European Commission, especially DG MARE and DG ENV, in preparing a future EU Directive to implement the BBNJ Agreement. The Directive will regulate environmental impact assessments for activities in areas beyond national jurisdiction, help protect marine biodiversity, and address certain activities related to marine genetic resources and their digital sequence information.

The study focuses specifically on the EIA and MGR chapters of the BBNJ Agreement, examining the parts that need to be transposed into EU law as identified by the Commission.

Timeline: The total duration of the contract is 12 months, and began on 26 February 2025.

Deliverables

Alongside internal deliverables, a final report will be produced which presents the following to support the development of the future EU legal instrument implementing the BBNJ Agreement, focusing on MGR and EIA:

  1. MGR: Practical options for how the EU can implement the notification and compliance requirements under the Agreement. It will examine traceability of genetic resources and digital sequence information, propose workable compliance approaches, and assess how the new system can align with existing EU Access and Benefit Sharing rules.
  2. EIA: Identify which activities in ABNJ should be subject to screening or a full assessment. It will analyse existing EU and international frameworks, refine thresholds and definitions, draw lessons from five case studies, and develop a clear, ready-to-use list of activities that should always require an EIA.


Overall, the study provides a structured and evidence-based foundation for coherent EU implementation of these two pillars of the BBNJ Agreement. 

Overview

The aim of the contract is to set up and run the Secretariat for the BBNJ High Ambition Coalition (HAC) and to carry out its outreach and communication tasks, as well as meetings’ organisation and policy support for the development of the HAC.

The contractor will be requested to work in close collaboration with the possible future co-chairs of the HAC, as well as the HAC members.

To fulfil this aim, the specific objectives are to:

  • Set up and run the Secretariat of the HAC and perform secretariat functions, including communication duties.
  • Provide support for policy development to the HAC and its membership.
  • Support to international outreach in relation to the goals of the HAC.
  • Organise events, including side event/s, to ensure visibility of the HAC, back-to-back with important international events.
  • Support two thematic working groups to advance the HAC goals, through producing papers, possibly jointly with the HAC membership, organising workshops, and drawing and publicising conclusions.


Timeline:
The total duration of the contract is 36 months, and began on 25 March 2025.

More information

The Coalition is co-chaired by the European Union, Palau, and Seychelles, and serves to:

  • Accelerate ratification and implementation of the BBNJ Treaty.
  • Provide vision, leadership, a strong, influential international voice for the ratification and rapid implementation of the High Seas Treaty.
  • Provide a platform for members to work collaboratively, sharing experience and seeking support for future proposal and ideas in the BBNJ framework.
  • Build global momentum for high seas conservation.
  • Promote science-based ocean protection measures.


The HAC brings together 47 country members from all regions of the world.

On 28 May 2025, the BBNJ High Ambition Coalition Declaration was launched which reaffirms political commitment to the rapid ratification and ambitious implementation of the BBNJ Agreement. It calls for urgent action to protect the high seas through science-based marine protected areas, fair benefit sharing from marine genetic resources, strong environmental impact assessment processes, and enhanced capacity building and financial support for developing States, urging all countries to ratify the Agreement swiftly.

Overview

Specific Contract 3 supports the EU in designing how the BBNJ standardised batch identifier will function in practice. It analyses the legal and technical requirements of the identifier, reviews existing tracking systems, and tests how it could operate across scientific research and data systems. The project also engages negotiators and stakeholders to develop practical recommendations and a roadmap for piloting the identifier ahead of implementation under the BBNJ Agreement.

To fulfil this aim, the following objectives have been defined:

  • Identify the characteristics that the batch identifier must have to fulfil its traceability role within the BBNJ Agreement while being novel.
  • Test the insertion of batch identifiers as a reverse engineered experiment into 2 scenarios from past scientific marine research in ABNJ to highlight possible issues to be solved.
  • Design an iterative and participative experimental approach to set-up a procedure for generating the standardised BBNJ batch identifier.


Timeline:
The total duration of the contract is 12 months, and began on 03 June 2025.

Deliverables

Alongside internal deliverables, Specific Contract 3 will produce a comprehensive technical and policy package to support the operationalisation of the BBNJ standardised batch identifier for marine genetic resources.

The Specific Contract will deliver:

  • A detailed analysis of the legal and policy requirements for the batch identifier under the BBNJ Agreement
  • A review and comparative assessment of existing identifier systems and traceability mechanisms, identifying relevant models and gaps
  • A structured proposal outlining the design, core characteristics and governance features of the batch identifier
  • Testing and demonstration of how the identifier could function in practice across research, collection, notification and data systems
  • An assessment of implementation options, risks and practical challenges, including chain of custody and interoperability considerations
  • Recommendations to support EU engagement in negotiations and technical discussions
  • A practical roadmap for piloting and phased operationalisation of the identifier
 

This package will support the design, testing and operationalisation of the BBNJ standardised batch identifier, providing practical recommendations and a roadmap to support its implementation and EU engagement in negotiations.

Overview

The main aim of the contract is to set up an informal expert’ group to assist the BBNJ negotiations in relation to the implementation of the BBNJ Agreement in all its components: Marine Genetic Resources (MGR) and the fair and equitable sharing of benefits; area-based management tools (ABMTs); environmental impact assessments (EIAs); and capacity building and transfer of marine technology (CBTMT).  

To fulfil this aim, the following objectives have been defined:

  • Setting up of an informal expert group on the BBNJ Agreement.
  • Organisation of in-person and online workshops (at least 6).
  • Production of scientific and technical inputs, such as Policy Briefs, on various topics relevant to the ongoing discussions at the BBNJ Preparatory Committee meetings, and the upcoming negotiations at the Conference of the Parties of the BBNJ Agreement.


Timeline:
The total duration of the contract is 36 months, and began on 06 January 2026.

Deliverables

Specific Contract 4 establishes a structured expert dialogue process to inform the ratification and early implementation of the BBNJ Agreement across its four pillars, including cross-cutting themes. Specifically, the contract will seek to deliver:

  • Establishment and coordination of a multidisciplinary informal expert group, supported by a dedicated online collaboration platform
  • Design and delivery of a series of at least six thematic workshops (online and in-person), each framed by targeted discussion papers
  • Production of consolidated workshop reports and a minimum of six policy briefs, translating expert dialogue into policy-relevant recommendations
  • Organisation of two international side events to present key findings and contribute to Preparatory Commission and COP1 discussions


Technical pillar leads will support the delivery of workshops and production of products.

Overall, the contract delivers a coordinated expert platform and a suite of policy-oriented outputs to strengthen technical input, build consensus and support informed decision-making in the early implementation phase of the BBNJ Agreement 

Upcoming Activities

Title: Building a Clearing-House Mechanism for Knowledge and Technology Exchange workshop
Date: 13 March 2026 (by invitation only)
Location: BBNJ Symposium, Rio, Brazil


This workshop will explore how to operationalise the CBTMT framework. The discussion will examine what marine technology encompasses under Article 1(10) and how this shapes CBTMT obligations, how to move from identifying capacity needs to delivering appropriate technical and financial support, how to facilitate access to essential marine technologies, and how to coordinate CBTMT across the substantive pillars of the BBNJ Agreement, avoiding duplication and fragmentation. The workshop assesses how the Clearing House Mechanism under Article 51 can support these implementation challenges.

A group of 30 CBTMT and Cross-Cutting experts is expected to attend the in-person workshop in Rio, and the workshop will be coordinated by Julia Shutz, Blue Pangolin Consulting and Landell Mills.

The workshop report and policy brief are intended to inform the Preparatory Committee and COP1, ensuring that insights from the workshop effectively contribute to policy development.

Overview

The aim of the study is to compare and analyse the draft proposals for ABMTs, including MPAs, and other effective conservation measures (OECMs) in ABNJ, in view of facilitating the work of the EU in preparing positions on draft proposals that could potentially, in the future, be supported by the EU and its Member States.

To fulfil this aim, the following objectives have been defined:

  • Analyse the main existing draft proposals for the establishment of ABMT/MPA/OECMs in ABNJ.
  • Review draft proposals including their governance, regional and geopolitical aspects.
  • Make recommendations on draft proposals that could be potentially supported by the EU.


Timeline:
The total duration of the contract is 11 months, and began on 01 March 2026.

Specific Contract 5 will deliver a consolidated scientific, legal and geopolitical assessment to support strategic EU engagement on high seas ABMT proposals under the BBNJ Agreement. Specifically, the contract will seek to provide:

  • Comprehensive inventory and mapping of existing and emerging ABMT proposals in ABNJ, including ecological coherence and spatial analysis
  • Assessment of proposals against BBNJ Annex I criteria, drawing lessons to inform a model, high-quality ABMT proposal
  • Governance and geopolitical analysis of selected proposals, examining institutional feasibility, political dynamics and strategic considerations
  • Validation workshop and expert consultation, consolidating technical and policy feedback
  • Targeted recommendations identifying priority ABMT proposals that the EU could support, champion or jointly advance


Overall, the contract will provide a strategic evidence base to guide EU positioning and decision-making on the development and adoption of high seas protected areas under the BBNJ Agreement.

For more information on this Single Framework Contract, use the “Contact Us” page, or email us directly below:

“The entry into force of the Biodiversity Beyond National Jurisdiction Agreement marks a historic step for our planet. This milestone shows the power of multilateralism, as we head to New York for the UN General Assembly. We thank our UN partners for their collaboration. The EU and its Member States remain committed to the swift and ambitious implementation of the agreement. And we call on more countries to join our movement, for the universal protection of our ocean.”

Ursula von der Leyen, President of the European Commission​​​​​​​