Russia, U.S. tout cooperation ahead of Arctic Council meeting
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[May 18, 2021]
By Humeyra Pamuk and Tom Balmforth
WASHINGTON/MOSCOW (Reuters) - With a
warming climate melting more Arctic ice cover and global industries
eager to exploit the region for shipping, fishing, drilling and mining,
the United States and Russia sounded a rare, cooperative note going into
an Arctic meeting this week.
The conciliatory tone was encouraging to governments, local residents,
investors and environmental groups worried about a lack of regulations
and potential environmental damage as industries look northward to the
world's largest remaining oil, gas and mineral deposits.
"Our vision ... is very much one of cooperation," U.S. State Department
Arctic Envoy Jim de Hart told Reuters in an interview ahead of the
biennial meeting of the eight Arctic Council nations. "It's about action
on climate change. It’s about good science ... and keeping the region
peaceful.”
In Moscow, senior Arctic Council official Nikolai Korchunov also struck
a conciliatory tone, telling a briefing last week that Moscow and
Washington have "very constructive" dialogue at the Arctic Council.
U.S. President Joe Biden's concern about fighting climate change, a
U-Turn in Washington's position, was especially welcome at a time when
arctic temperatures are rising faster than the global average and
summertime sea ice is increasingly sparse and thin.
Some worried, however, that deep U.S.-Russian disagreements over other,
unrelated issues could hinder talks between U.S. Secretary of State
Antony Blinken and his Russian counterpart, Sergey Lavrov.
Since Biden was inaugurated in January, Washington and Moscow have
clashed over charges of Russian interference in the U.S. presidential
election; challenges of Ukraine's sovereignty; Moscow's jailing of
Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny; and U.S. support of democracy activists
in Russia and Belarus.
Both governments are also wary of each other's military activity in the
Arctic, and Washington is watching China's economic moves there.
Fighting climate change will be Washington's priority, de Hart told
Reuters. That is a sea change from former President Donald Trump, whose
delegate to the 2019 Arctic Council meeting blocked a declaration saying
climate change was a serious regional threat.
"There's a very great understanding of the problems facing the Arctic
region and the interest of our countries in developing collective
approaches to managing the region's development," Korchunov said.
Russia is to take the Council’s rotating leadership from Iceland until
2023. Other nations on the Council are Canada, Sweden, Finland, Norway
and Denmark, with indigenous populations also represented.
"We don't have any friction,” Korchunov said. “Yes, there can be
disagreement on some issues, but ... they are generally tactical in
nature.”
The U.S. vote in 2019 against the climate change declaration made it the
first such measure to fail since the group was formed in 1996, and de
Hart pledged there would not be a repeat this year.
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Floating ice is seen during the expedition of the Greenpeace's
Arctic Sunrise ship at the Arctic Ocean, September 14, 2020.
REUTERS/Natalie Thomas/File Photo
"I am very confident that, at this ministerial, there
will be agreement," de Hart said. "What you will see is climate
elevated as a priority for the Arctic Council and for its future
work."
WATCHING CHINA
As Washington advocates for sustainable development, it is keeping
an eye on China's long-term ambitions and billions of dollars of
investment in the Arctic. China is not an Arctic Council member but
it declared itself a “near-Arctic” nation in 2018 and said it wanted
to “participate in the governance of the Arctic.”
"We want the Arctic to be open for business,” de Hart said. “By that
I mean business and investment according to high standards –
respects environmental protection, respects local communities."
Chinese investors have bid unsuccessfully to open mines in Canada
and Greenland, which the U.S. Geological Survey says has the world’s
biggest undeveloped deposits of rare earth minerals.
Another U.S. concern is the Russian military, de Hart said, while
Korchunov said Moscow has its eyes on any NATO moves to expand in
the region.
"We just have to have our eyes open and make sure that we're
examining those activities through a national security lens," de
Hart said. "Some of (Russia's) military activities and the behavior
of some of its forces are not transparent, provocative and sometimes
unprofessional, and that's a concern.”
"It would be important for us to have the constructive spirit of
cooperation that is in the Arctic Council ... in the
military-political sphere," Korchunov said.
On Monday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov proposed that
council members have heads of their respected armed forces meet
regularly to defuse any tensions that arise.
Lavrov accused Norway of trying to justify a greater NATO presence
in the Arctic and dismissed the western alliance's concerns over
increasing Russian military activity in the Arctic.
"It's long been well known to everyone that this is our territory,
this is our land, we are responsible for ensuring that our Arctic
coast is safe. And everything our country does there is absolutely
legal and legitimate," he said.
(Reporting by Humeyra Pamuk in Washington and Tom Balmforth in
Moscow; Editing by Katy Daigle and David Gregorio)
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