Former UN Legal Counsel slams Kosmos drilling in Western Sahara
“I have seen that they [Kosmos executives] think their actions are in conformity with my legal opinion, and my determined opinion is that they are not”, says Ambassador Hans Corell, author of the UN Legal Opinion on oil exploration and exploitation in Western Sahara.
Published 13 January 2015


“Morocco is breaking international law … signing an agreement of this nature is in violation of international law,” Hans Corell told MEED on 8 January. “I am looking to the Security Council and the responsibility that the council has under the UN Charter.”

Hans Corell is the former head of the UN Secretariat Office of Legal Affairs, who was commissioned by the UN Security Council in 2001 to draft a Legal Opinion on the increasing interest of big oil companies to pull into Western Sahara under contracts signed with the Moroccan government. The Opinion, delivered in January of 2002, concluded that any oil exploration or exploitation would be in violation of international law if not in accordance with the wishes and the interests of the people of Western Sahara, the Saharawi people.

On 19 December 2014, the American oil company Kosmos Energy became the first company ever to drill for oil in Western Sahara, even though the Saharawi people have on multiple occasions spoken out against the drilling - either through their civil society organisations in occupied Western Sahara, or by voice of their internationally recognised political representation, the Frente Polisario.

Corell went on to say that “I have seen that they [Kosmos executives] think their actions are in conformity with my legal opinion, and my determined opinion is that they are not”. He continued that “Signing an agreement in which Morocco refers to Western Sahara as the southern provinces of the Kingdom of Morocco is at variance with corporate social responsibility and the principles to protect, respect and remedy.”

Morocco invaded Western Sahara in 1975. To this day, Morocco continues to occupy large parts of the territory, in blatant disrespect for international law which accords the Saharawi people a right to freely determine the status of their homeland. UN efforts to settle the conflict by means of a self-determination referendum have been thwarted by Morocco. The International Court of Justice has stated that there are no ties of sovereignty between Morocco and the territory, and no State in the world recognises Morocco's self-proclaimed sovereingty over Western Sahara. The UN still considers Western Sahara as a colony, while the African Union has accepted Western Sahara's exiled government as the official authority of the territory.

Kosmos Energy originally signed an agreement with Morocco to drill in the Western Sahara in 2006. It then renewed the licence in 2011 and signed a further deal with Scotland’s Cairn Energy and Morocco’s National Bureau of Petroleum & Mines (ONHYM), taking respectively a 20% and a 25% interest, in October 2013.

Trial underway over firebombing of WSRW partner in Denmark

A trial has begun in Copenhagen against four men accused of carrying out the January 2025 arson attack on the offices of WSRW partner Global Aktion.

15 June 2026

Heidelberg Materials deepens its role in Morocco’s occupation of Western Sahara

The German company confirms once again that its operations in occupied Western Sahara are closely tied to Morocco’s infrastructure expansion in the territory - while continuing to dismiss the Saharawi people’s right to consent.

05 June 2026

The conflict phosphates - four decades of plunder

For over 40 years, a Moroccan state-owned company has exported phosphate rock from occupied Western Sahara.  

29 May 2026

Record low number of importers of Western Sahara phosphates

Only three companies imported phosphate rock from occupied Western Sahara in 2025 - the lowest number ever recorded. The findings appear in our annual P for Plunder report, released today.

29 May 2026