#33 - JRL 2008 - Special Edition - JRL Home
RIA Novosti
April 21, 2008
Arctic spring fever
MOSCOW. (RIA Novosti political commentator Maxim Krans) - A new North Pole
expedition, which on Friday April 18 was blessed by the Russian government's
Maritime Commission, is to continue explorations to bolster Russia's claim to
the Arctic shelf.
But other claimants to oceanic areas, which hide up to one quarter of the
world's remaining energy resources, are not going to sit idle either. Judging by
everything, we are in for another round of fighting for the possession of truly
untold mineral resources.
The current Arktika-2008 expedition, like the previous one, will be held as
part of the International Polar Year, which actually includes two yearly cycles
of observations.
At the fourth Northern Socio-Ecological Congress in Syktyvkar recently, Artur
Chilingarov suggested the year be extended for another five years.
The motive is clear, and the top Russian polar explorer does not conceal it:
"It is no secret that polar countries are trying to make the Arctic an
international resource. We, however, must make it plain to the global community
that we will not give up our interests in the Arctic."
The academic tasks of the expedition are taking a back seat. Of course, all
expeditions to the pole pursue scientific aims, but they are all closely linked
with concrete economic interests.
Russia has little time left to prove the far from obvious fact that the
Lomonosov Ridge under the ocean is a continuation of the Siberian continental
platform. This, in accordance with the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea,
allows Russia to claim a triangle with a base formed by the coastline from the
Kola Peninsula to Chukotka's tip and the apex at the North Pole.
Last year, Chilingarov placed a Russian flag at that apex, laying Russia's
claims to a vast territory covering 1.2 million square kilometers. A few months
later he installed a titanium tricolor under it, in the oceanic depths. True, he
failed to persuade foreign rivals, or the Russian scientists for whom he raised
soil samples from the bottom. Contrary to the upbeat remarks by some officials,
they are not enough to prove Russia's sovereignty over that part of the ocean.
First Deputy Prime Minister Sergei Ivanov, speaking at the commission,
sharply criticized the ministries and government departments charged with the
task saying: "They have underestimated the importance of the mission, and chosen
the wrong means of accomplishing it."
In 2001, Russia had already tried to go about the problem the easy way. But
experts from the UN Commission on the Limits to the Continental Shelf found its
arguments unconvincing. This time, Russia must make a more compelling case.
The seismic probing and terrain surveys done by earlier expeditions will no
longer do. What is needed is soil samples, which can be obtained only by
drilling, but Russia does not have such drilling vessels. So this is going to be
a puzzle that will take a very ingenious person to solve.
Russia's rivals are meanwhile stepping up their efforts. A report delivered
at the March summit of the European Union said bluntly that the EU countries
should brace for conflicts with Russia over Arctic energy resources and draw up
a common policy.
The same subject is treated in NATO's "new manifesto," which was discussed
recently at its Bucharest summit. The theme was also taken up at the Nordic
Globalization Forum in Sweden's Riksgransen, attended by the prime ministers of
Scandinavian countries.
On the other side of the Atlantic, the United Sates is likewise stepping up
the efforts to join the Convention on the Law of the Sea, without which it
cannot tender for the Arctic wealth. In the meantime it is building up its sea
muscle: it has decided to construct two new heavy icebreakers and to open a
coast guard base at Barrow, the northernmost point in Alaska.
Canada is also going to establish its military outpost in the Arctic, as well
as a deep-sea port. Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper has promised that six
patrol ships will be protecting the country's north-west within the next few
years.
Paradoxically, not only Arctic Club member-countries are claiming the shelf.
Germany and China are showing an unconcealed interest in it, and sent
expeditions to that region last year, as well as South Korea, France, the
Netherlands and over two dozens other nations.
The United Kingdom has for the first time laid claim to the Arctic shelf, or
rather to Rockall, a tiny granite rock in the North Atlantic - altogether 27
meters across. In 1955, the U.K. annexed this islet, the empire's last
territorial gain. Denmark, Ireland and Iceland are now claiming it, and it is
understandable why: the possession of Rockall enables the owner to push its
maritime borders 150 miles further out, closer to the cherished Arctic
treasures. London's application must be considered by the UN Commission before
May of next year.
Spring fever is in the air, and the coveted object is the ocean shelf. This
can only be expected with the approach of a new Arctic season. As the ice thaws,
a further cooling of relations may be seen on the "northern fronts." It is very
likely that in response to Russia's new expedition other claimants will send
their own research armadas to the North Pole.
In the big game involving both great and not as great powers, all players are
aware that the one that gets a sizeable piece of the Arctic pie will be well off
for decades after. As the British Observer magazine recently remarked: "those
who control oil and water will control the world."
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