Gray-Zone Maritime Rights-Protection Strategy
Asymmetric Costs and Sustainable Presence, A Case Study of the China–Philippines Dispute over Scarborough Shoal
- Wu, Shaoyuan
Global AI Governance and Policy Research Center, EPINOVA LLC
https://orcid.org/0009-0008-0660-8232
Description
This working paper develops a Cost–Distance–Frequency (CDF) framework for evaluating gray-zone maritime rights-protection operations under asymmetric geography. Using the China–Philippines dispute over Scarborough Shoal as a case study, it models cost per effective hour of presence, risk expectation, sustainability thresholds, and manned–unmanned substitution conditions to assess how sustained presence, operational tempo, and cost compression shape long-term strategic symmetry.
Abstract
Gray-zone maritime rights-protection operations increasingly hinge on sustained presence rather than episodic tactical encounters, particularly under conditions of geographic asymmetry between near-shore and far-shore actors. This paper introduces a Cost–Distance–Frequency (CDF) analytical framework that models cost per effective hour of presence, integrates risk expectation and policy-defined sustainability thresholds, and derives closed-form conditions for manned–unmanned substitution in long-duration deployments. Applying the framework to the China–Philippines dispute over Scarborough Shoal, the analysis demonstrates how near-shore advantages rooted in proximity and sortie frequency can be structurally offset over time through far-shore cost compression, prepositioning, and unmanned force integration. The study highlights the dynamic interaction among cost accumulation, operational tempo, and incident risk in shaping strategic symmetry under gray-zone conditions. By linking operational design to long-term fiscal and institutional endurance, the CDF framework offers a potentially generalizable analytical tool for informing force-posture decisions in contested maritime environments.
Files
| Name | Type | |
|---|---|---|
| Gray-Zone Maritime Rights-Protection Strategy.pdf Full-text PDF of the publication | application/pdf | Download |
Keywords
- Gray-zone maritime strategy
- Maritime rights-protection
- Cost–Distance–Frequency framework
- CDF model
- Scarborough Shoal
- China–Philippines dispute
- South China Sea
- Sustained presence
- Asymmetric costs
- Operational sustainability
- Manned–unmanned substitution
- Unmanned surface vehicles
- Maritime law enforcement
- Effective presence
- Risk expectation
Subjects
- International Relations
- Maritime Security
- South China Sea Studies
- Gray-Zone Conflict
- Strategic Studies
- Operational Sustainability Modeling
Recommended citation
Wu, Shaoyuan. (2025). Gray-Zone Maritime Rights-Protection Strategy: Asymmetric Costs and Sustainable Presence, A Case Study of the China–Philippines Dispute over Scarborough Shoal. Global AI Governance and Policy Research Center, EPINOVA LLC. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18095271. DOI: To be assigned after Crossref membership approval.
APA citation
Wu, S. (2025). Gray-Zone Maritime Rights-Protection Strategy: Asymmetric Costs and Sustainable Presence, A Case Study of the China–Philippines Dispute over Scarborough Shoal. Global AI Governance and Policy Research Center, EPINOVA LLC. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18095271. DOI: To be assigned after Crossref membership approval.
Alternate identifiers
| Scheme | Identifier | Description |
|---|---|---|
| File name | Gray-Zone Maritime Rights-Protection Strategy.pdf | Source PDF file name |
| Publication date | 2025-10-13 | Date shown in the PDF title page |
| DOI | 10.5281/zenodo.18095271 | Zenodo DOI from the earliest ORCID-derived metadata record |
| ORCID put-code | 201033348 | ORCID Public API put-code from the earliest metadata record |
| Repository folder | https://github.com/EPINOVALLC/EPINOVA-Research/tree/main/Working%20Paper/F/2025/2025-10-13 | GitHub repository folder from the earliest metadata record |
Related works
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