France–United Kingdom border

The border between the countries of France and the United Kingdom in Europe is a maritime border that stretches along the Channel, the North Sea and the Atlantic Ocean. The Channel Tunnel links the two countries underground and is defined as a 'land frontier', and not widely recognised as a land border.

France-UK border
Frontière entre la France et le Royaume-Uni
Characteristics
Entities France  United Kingdom
History
Established1903
Current shape1986
TreatiesInternational arbitrations from 1977, 1978, 1982, 1988 and 1991 for the maritime border and the Treaty of Canterbury (1986) for the channel tunnel.
Geological profile along the tunnel (in brown) as constructed above sea

It is defined by several international arbitrations from 1977, 1978, 1982, 1988 and 1991[1] for the maritime border and by the Treaty of Canterbury (1986) for the channel tunnel.

Maritime border

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  1. 50°07′29″N 00°30′00″W / 50.12472°N 0.50000°W / 50.12472; -0.50000 (point A)
  2. 50°08′27″N 01°00′00″W / 50.14083°N 1.00000°W / 50.14083; -1.00000 (point B)
  3. 50°09′15″N 01°30′00″W / 50.15417°N 1.50000°W / 50.15417; -1.50000 (point C)
  4. 50°09′14″N 02°03′26″W / 50.15389°N 2.05722°W / 50.15389; -2.05722 (point D)
  5. 49°57′50″N 02°48′24″W / 49.96389°N 2.80667°W / 49.96389; -2.80667 (point D1)
  6. 49°46′30″N 02°56′30″W / 49.77500°N 2.94167°W / 49.77500; -2.94167 (point D2)
  7. 49°38′30″N 03°21′00″W / 49.64167°N 3.35000°W / 49.64167; -3.35000 (point D3)
  8. 49°33′12″N 03°34′50″W / 49.55333°N 3.58056°W / 49.55333; -3.58056 (point D4)
  9. 49°32′42″N 03°42′44″W / 49.54500°N 3.71222°W / 49.54500; -3.71222 (point E)
  10. 49°32′08″N 03°55′47″W / 49.53556°N 3.92972°W / 49.53556; -3.92972 (point F)
  11. 49°27′40″N 04°17′54″W / 49.46111°N 4.29833°W / 49.46111; -4.29833 (point F1)
  12. 49°27′23″N 04°21′46″W / 49.45639°N 4.36278°W / 49.45639; -4.36278 (point G)
  13. 49°23′14″N 04°32′39″W / 49.38722°N 4.54417°W / 49.38722; -4.54417 (point H)
  14. 49°14′28″N 05°11′00″W / 49.24111°N 5.18333°W / 49.24111; -5.18333 (point I)
  15. 49°13′22″N 05°18′00″W / 49.22278°N 5.30000°W / 49.22278; -5.30000 (point J)
  16. 49°13′00″N 05°20′40″W / 49.21667°N 5.34444°W / 49.21667; -5.34444 (point K)
  17. 49°12′10″N 05°40′30″W / 49.20278°N 5.67500°W / 49.20278; -5.67500 (point L)
  18. 49°12′00″N 05°41′30″W / 49.20000°N 5.69167°W / 49.20000; -5.69167 (point M)
  19. 48°06′00″N 09°36′30″W / 48.10000°N 9.60833°W / 48.10000; -9.60833 (point N)

In 2003, France signed an agreement with the United Kingdom to introduce 'juxtaposed controls' (in French, des bureaux de contrôles nationaux juxtaposés, or 'BCNJ') at Dover on the British side and at Calais, Dunkerque and Boulogne-sur-Mer on the French side.

This means that, when travelling from Dover to France by ferry, French immigration checks are carried out by the Police aux Frontières on British soil before boarding the ferry, whilst French customs checks take place upon arrival on French soil.

 
The Port of Calais

When travelling in the reverse direction from Calais, Dunkerque and Boulogne-sur-Mer in France to the UK by ferry, French immigration exit checks and British immigration checks both take place on French soil before boarding the ferry, whilst British customs checks take place upon arrival on British soil.

Border crossing point French agency responsible for checks Nature of presence Ferries to/from outside the Schengen Area
Immigration Customs Company Foreign port(s)
Caen port Police aux Frontières Customs Permanent Brittany Ferries Portsmouth
Calais port Police aux Frontières Customs Permanent DFDS Seaways and P&O Ferries Dover
Carteret port Police aux Frontières Customs Permanent Manche Îles Express Guernsey and Jersey
Cherbourg port Police aux Frontières Customs Permanent Brittany Ferries
Irish Ferries
Poole and Portsmouth
Rosslare
Diélette port Customs Customs Permanent Manche Îles Express Alderney and Guernsey
Dieppe port Police aux Frontières Customs Permanent DFDS Seaways Newhaven
Dunkerque port Police aux Frontières Customs Permanent DFDS Seaways Dover
Granville port Police aux Frontières Customs Permanent Manche Îles Express Jersey
Le Havre port Police aux Frontières Customs Permanent LD Lines Portsmouth
Marseille port Police aux Frontières Customs Permanent Algérie Ferries Algiers, Bejaia, Oran and Skikda
Roscoff port Customs Customs Permanent Brittany Ferries
Irish Ferries
Cork and Plymouth
Rosslare
Saint Malo port Police aux Frontières Customs Permanent Brittany Ferries
Condor Ferries
Portsmouth
Guernsey, Jersey, Poole, Weymouth
Sète port Police aux Frontières Customs Permanent Comarit Nador and Tangier

Land frontier

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General Wolseley riding on the fleeing lion. Published in the American humour magazine Puck (approx. 1885). It depicts fears of a Channel Tunnel
 
Channel Tunnel course

The Treaty of Canterbury (French: Traité de Cantorbéry) was signed by British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and Foreign Secretary Sir Geoffrey Howe, French President

François Mitterrand and Minister of Foreign Affairs Roland Dumas on 12 February 1986, and is the original document providing for the undersea tunnel between the two countries.[2]

The Treaty of Canterbury (1986) is significant and unusual because it is a modern and recent modification to the national borders of the UK and France.

The Anglo-French Treaty on the Channel Tunnel was signed by both governments in Canterbury Cathedral. The treaty prepared the concession for the construction and operation of the fixed link by privately owned companies. It outlines the methods to be used for arbitration in the event of a dispute. It sets up the Intergovernmental Commission (IGC) which is responsible for monitoring all matters associated with the construction and operation of the tunnel on behalf of the British and French governments, together with a Safety Authority to advise the IGC.

It draws a land frontier between the two countries in the middle of the Channel tunnel – the first of its kind.[3][4][5]

In the 1991 Sangatte Protocol, France signed an agreement with the United Kingdom to introduce 'juxtaposed controls' (in French, des bureaux de contrôles nationaux juxtaposés, or 'BCNJ') at Eurostar and Eurotunnel stations on immigration and customs, where investigations happen before travel. France is part of the Schengen Agreement, which has largely abolished border checks between member nations, but the United Kingdom is not.

These juxtaposed controls mean that passports are checked before boarding first by officials belonging to the departing country and then officials of the destination country. These are placed only at the main Eurostar stations: French officials currently only operate at London St Pancras but have previously operated at Ebbsfleet International and Ashford International, while British officials currently only operate at Lille-Europe and Paris-Gare du Nord but have previously operated at Calais-Fréthun. There are security checks before boarding as well. For the shuttle road-vehicle trains, there are juxtaposed passport controls before boarding the trains.

Border crossing point French agency responsible for checks Nature of presence Trains to/from outside the Schengen Area
Immigration Customs
Bourg-Saint-Maurice railway station Customs Customs Seasonal
(beginning of December to mid-April)
Seasonal Eurostar ski service
Calais Fréthun railway station Police aux Frontières Customs Permanent Up to three Eurostar trains per day to/from London St Pancras, Trains no longer call at intermediate stations Ashford International and Ebbsfleet International. Customs Permanent Frequent Eurotunnel Shuttle services to/from Cheriton, Kent.
Lille Europe railway station Police aux Frontières Customs Permanent Up to ten Eurostar trains per day to/from London St Pancras, Trains no longer call at Ashford International and Ebbsfleet International.
Marne-la-Vallée – Chessy railway station Police aux Frontières Customs Permanent Up to one Eurostar train per day to/from London St Pancras.
Moûtiers–Salins–Brides-les-Bains railway station Customs Customs Seasonal
(beginning of December to mid-April)
Seasonal Eurostar ski service
Paris Gare du Nord railway station Police aux Frontières Customs Permanent Up to 16 Eurostar trains per day to/from London St Pancras, Trains no longer call at intermediate stations Ashford International and Ebbsfleet International.

Bibliography

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  • Georges Labrecque, « Les îles de l'Atlantique comme circonstances pertinentes à la délimitation des frontières maritimes », Norois, vol. 45, no 180 « L'Atlantique et les géographes », October–December 1998, p. 653–665 (DOI 10.3406/noroi.1998.6905), §1 « La frontière France/Royaume-Uni », p. 654–658.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ United Nations (ed.). "Delimitation of the Continental Shelf between the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and the French Republic" (PDF).
  2. ^ The New York Times: British-French Tunnel Treaty
  3. ^ Eurotunnel 2005 Annual Review, accessed on 10 December 2007 "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 May 2008. Retrieved 10 December 2007.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^ BBC Inside Out - South East: Monday 14 October 2002, accessed on 11 December 2007 http://www.bbc.co.uk/insideout/southeast/series1/channel-tunnel.shtml
  5. ^ United Nations (ed.). "Treaty concerning the construction and operation by private concessionaires of a channel fixed link. Signed at Canterbury on 12 February 1986" (PDF).
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  • France-UK Border Research: A library of research and primary sources regarding the situation for displaced people at the France-UK border