#30 - JRL 2008-103 - JRL Home
RIA Novosti
May 26, 2008
Serious division of the Arctic begins
MOSCOW. (RIA Novosti political commentator Andrei Fedyashin) - On May 27-29
Denmark plays host to its main Arctic neighbors at the Arctic Ocean Conference
held in the small town of Illulissat in Greenland. In addition to the hosts
(Denmark/Greenland), it will be attended by the foreign ministers of Russia, the
United States, Canada and Norway.
The declared theme of the meeting is "strengthening cooperation among Arctic
states in managing the Arctic Ocean." The Danes hope that the conference will
adopt a "political declaration... on the main problems of the future orientation
and management of the ocean."
In reality, before strengthening cooperation we need to legally define the
interests of the Arctic Ocean states. The ministerial meeting in Illulissat is
the first serious step in this direction. Leaving diplomatic niceties aside, it
will be about dividing up the Arctic, or rather, the continental shelf.
There is a consensus that the time has come to legitimize the interests of
the Arctic countries. However, so far the approach to division, its legal
principles and even whether the Arctic should belong to the Arctic countries or
to the world in general are questions that have yet to be answered. Antarctica
on the opposite end of the globe is regulated by international treaties. But the
Arctic is still a "no man's land," pieces of which tend to be grabbed from time
to time.
It is clear from the composition of the Illulissat meeting that the ministers
will not come up with any earth-shattering decisions. The chosen participants
raised eyebrows even before the meeting because the Danes failed to invite
Iceland, Sweden and Finland. And yet these countries, along with the
participants, are members of the Arctic Council, an intergovernmental
organization set up with the express purpose of discussing the problems of the
Northern region.
Faced with complaints from those who have been left out, Denmark promised
that all the other council members would receive detailed reports on the results
of the Greenland meeting. "We have been assured," said Urdur Gunnarsdottir, a
spokesman for the Icelandic Foreign Ministry, "that it would be a one-time
meeting and not an attempt to create an alternative to the Arctic Council."
The "five" would hardly be able to create such an alternative (without
causing a row), especially if one considers that the Arctic Council is becoming
more and more popular as the ice melts revealing untold natural riches. Already
its observers include Italy, France, Germany, Holland, Britain, Poland and
Spain. China joined the council as an observer late last year. Now it will send
its only icebreaker, the Snow Dragon, to "explore" the icy waters every year.
The Arctic "five," of course, cannot seize the entire region, but they can
develop the general rules that all the other members of the "Arctic club" will
have to follow. Russia, Canada, the United States, Denmark and Norway have
claimed as their sovereign right everything that is on, over, in and under the
Arctic Ocean.
But the gaps between their visions of how to divide it are as wide as the
difference between the tip of the iceberg and its real size. The status of the
continental shelf is regulated by the 1958 Continental Shelf Conventions
(without limits) and by the UN Law of the Sea Convention ("the marine
constitution of the world") of 1982 (200-350 nautical miles from the territorial
waters or a hundred miles from the depth of 2,500 meters).
The Canadians have always favored (and Russia supported them until 2001) "the
sectoral principle" that would draw borders from the tips of the national
territories straight along the meridians until the North Pole. In such a set-up,
the Arctic would be divided into very unequal parts like the tip of a water
melon: Russia would get the biggest slice (about 5.8 million square kilometers),
followed by Canada, Denmark (Greenland), Norway and finally the United States.
Obviously, such an approach does not suit Washington. The Americans have not
even ratified the 1982 Convention, and therefore can happily ignore all its
limitations. They demand a territory stretching 600 nautical miles from Alaska
to the Pole. The tip of the Earth would remain a no man's land of about 3
million square kilometers where everyone would be allowed to fish and mine.
The Danes have their own, and strangest, approach of all. Copenhagen wants
Arctic borders to run at an equal distance from the coasts of the claimant
countries. Because Greenland is closest to the Pole it would have the Pole under
the Danish plan. Denmark would get a slice almost as big as Canada's, and Russia
would lose about 1.8 million square kilometers. The European Union backs Denmark
because it would like to get an Arctic section with Denmark's help.
Until 2001, Russia adhered to the "sectoral principle," but after it ratified
the 1982 Convention in 1997, it agreed to its restrictions. A state can claim
either 350 miles of the continental shelf, or 100 miles beyond the depth of
2,500 meters. Russia has opted for the latter variant, and is now trying to
prove that the underwater Lomonosov Ridge is the continuation of the Siberian
continental plate and that Russia is entitled to it.
If we prove this, the North Pole will be Russia's. But proving this will be a
lot harder than conquering the North Pole.
|