Russia and the Arctic
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English
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Welcome to World Ocean Radio… I’m Peter Neill, Director of the World Ocean Observatory. This year, the United States turned over the Chair of the Arctic Council to Finland. The Council you will remember is the group of nations with direct connection to the circumpolar Arctic region, augmented by observer nations and organizations with interest but no contiguous geographical connection. The US had proposed a very ambitious agenda, moderate in its focus on balance between economic development and sustainability. Despite such good intentions and the strong support of the Obama administration, the chairmanship achieved only modest progress. Under the Trump administration there has yet been no clarification of the US position. The Finland Ambassador to the Arctic recently gave a first interview that suggested continuity of concern, restriction and regulation, sustainability, and commitment to the indigenous people of the Arctic as has been the past pattern, however deliberate over time. Russia, of course, has the longest Arctic coastline, from the north Atlantic to the north Pacific, across the top of the European continent. With the impact of temperature rise and ice melt that lengthy water passage has become of immense interest for east-west transportation and access to resources on land and sea in the high north. The Russians are well aware of this value and have moved with speed to take advantage of the many opportunities now available. Russia has long been aware of this strategic advantage and has invested presciently in the infrastructure and service elements required. Ports have been expanded and refurbished; most importantly, the Russians have the largest fleet of icebreakers and ice-rated vessels available now at the moment when the rest of the world begins to study or take first steps to ship via the northern sea route, the number of vessels making that passage rising exponentially over the past few years. Quietly, even within the context of Arctic Council policies and determinations, Russia has positioned itself to derive maximum benefit of the changing circumstances resulting from a changing climate. Here are some headlines from Russian press reports of Russian activity in the Arctic in the past few weeks: • Russian natural resources ministry expects more big discoveries on Arctic shelf. • Exploration license awarded to Novatek at Gyndansky block. • Construction machinery arrives at Novatek’s new plant area in Murmansk • Russia moves to finance Arctic liquid natural gas projects. • Rosfelt’s partners to invest over $8 billion in Russia’s offshore energy sector. • Nuclear energy may be solution for Arctic, Russian expert says. • Russia unveils plan for new amphibious ship for Arctic service. • Nuclear energy may be solution for the Arctic. There are many more. If you examine this litany of announcement and investment, you will see a serious extant intent to develop the Russian Arctic to the maximum, with a traditional emphasis on oil and mineral extraction as an expression of geopolitical and economic power. While these headlines do not mention industrial fishing, we can be assured that such development in that sector is equally advanced. There is national pride evident herein; a determined assertion that such actions are justified by right and law, and no Arctic Council conversation will stand in the way. There is no mention of standards for safety, for environmental standards and preservation, for response to any disaster from the inevitable stress on systems, machines, and employees working in these harsh and unforgiving conditions. Russia’s lack of interest in such protections has been evident since Chernobyl. There is also little or no mention of the people who live in these remote outposts, historically forgotten for the most part, who have neither the skills nor the desire for this potential invasion of their world and stand not to benefit from the positive outcomes, while certainly to be affected by the negative outcomes that will surely come. What is at work here is business as usual with power defined by extractive industry and manufacturing. As those who advocate from this same perspective in the United States and elsewhere are finding, the 21st century paradigm, new technologies, new financial structures, and new social values may not support this world view, thus not support return on this outmoded investment. The times that passed Russia by in the last decades since the collapse of the Soviet Union may pass by Russia faster and farther again as they double-down on regressive actions and politics. But we should be aware, and alert, that this mentality is in very much in play, presently, seriously, and invisibly, with autocratic determination and little concern for the consequence of failure. We will discuss these issues, and more, in future editions of World Ocean Radio. - - -
As Finland begins to outline its Arctic Council agenda for the next two years, Russian involvement and investment in the region continues to grow at a fast pace. In this episode of World Ocean Radio, host Peter Neill explains Russia’s history in the Arctic and their present and future interest, centered primarily on the extraction of oil and mineral resources. And he cautions that Russia, with their advantage to the region via fleet size and access, shows little concern for the consequences of the inevitable negative outcomes from increased exploitative activity.
About World Ocean Radio
Peter Neill, Director of the World Ocean Observatory and host of World Ocean Radio, provides coverage of a broad spectrum of ocean issues from science and education to advocacy and exemplary projects. World Ocean Radio, a project of the World Ocean Observatory, is a weekly series of five-minute audio essays available for syndicated use at no cost by college and community radio stations worldwide. A selection of episodes is now available in Portuguese, Spanish, French, Swahili, and Mandarin, enabling us to reach 75% of the world's population. For more information, visit WorldOceanObservatory.org/world-ocean-radio-global.
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Russian cruise ship, Svalbard, Norway
Image Credit
Thomas Hallermann, Marine Photobank
Episode Resources
< Arctic Council, Finland 2-Year Chairmanship
< About the Arctic Council
< Interview: Finland Ambassador to the Arctic
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