Fears mount for the Arctic as cooperation with Russia stalls
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[May 09, 2023]
By Humeyra Pamuk, Gloria Dickie and Gwladys Fouche
WASHINGTON/LONDON/OSLO (Reuters) - For nearly three decades, the Arctic
Council has been a successful example of post-Cold War cooperation.
Its eight members, including Russia and the United States, have
cooperated on climate-change research and social development across the
ecologically sensitive region.
Now, a year after council members stopped working with Russia following
its invasion of Ukraine and as Norway prepares to assume the
chairmanship from Moscow on May 11, experts are asking whether the polar
body's viability is at risk if it cannot cooperate with the country that
controls over half of the Arctic coastline.
An ineffective Arctic Council could have dire implications for the
region's environment and its 4 million inhabitants who face the effects
of melting sea ice and the interest of non-Arctic countries in the
region's mostly untapped mineral resources.
The work of the council, which comprises the eight Arctic states of
Finland, Norway, Iceland, Sweden, Russia, Denmark, Canada and the United
States, in the past has produced binding agreements on environmental
protection and preservation.
It is also a rare platform giving a voice to the region's Indigenous
peoples. It does not deal with security issues.
But with the end of cooperation with Moscow, about a third of the
council's 130 projects are on hold, new projects cannot go ahead and
existing ones cannot be renewed. Western and Russian scientists no
longer share climate change findings, for example, and cooperation for
possible search-and-rescue missions or oil spills has stopped.
"I am worried that this will really hobble the ability of the Arctic
Council to work through these various issues," U.S. senator Angus King
from Maine told Reuters.
A DIVIDED REGION?
The Arctic is warming about four times as fast as the rest of the world.
As sea ice vanishes, polar waters are opening to shipping and other
industries eager to exploit the region's bounty of natural resources,
including oil, gas, and metals such as gold, iron and rare earths.
The discord between Russia and the other Arctic Council members means
that an effective response to these changes is far less likely.
"Norway has a big challenge," said John Holdren, co-director of the
Harvard Kennedy School's Arctic Initiative and a former science advisor
to U.S. President Barack Obama. "That's how to rescue as much as
possible of the Arctic Council's good work in the absence of Russia."
Russia argues this work cannot continue without it.
The council is weakening, Russian Arctic Ambassador Nikolay Korchunov
told Reuters, saying he was not confident it "will be able to remain the
main platform on Arctic issues".
Adding to the worries is the possibility that Russia will go its own way
on issues affecting the region or even establish a rival council.
Recently, it has taken steps to expand cooperation in the Arctic with
non-Arctic states. On April 24, Russia and China signed a memorandum
establishing cooperation between the countries' coast guards in the
Arctic.
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A southeast Greenland polar bear on
glacier, or freshwater, ice is seen in this handout photograph taken
in September 2016. Thomas W. Johansen/NASA Oceans Melting
Greenland/Handout via REUTERS
Days earlier, on April 14, Russia invited China, India, Brazil and
South Africa - the BRICS - to conduct research at its settlement on
Svalbard, an Arctic archipelago under Norwegian sovereignty where
other countries can operate under a 1920 Treaty.
"Russia is seeking to build relationships with some non-Arctic
countries, particularly China, and that is a development that is
concerning," said David Balton, executive director of the Arctic
Steering Committee at the White House.
Russia's Korchunov said Moscow welcomed non-Arctic states in the
region, provided they did not come with a military agenda.
"Our focus on a purely peaceful format of partnership also reflects
the need of development of scientific and economic cooperation with
non-Arctic countries," he said.
HOW TO ENGAGE WITH MOSCOW
Norway says it is "optimistic" a seamless transition of the
chairmanship from Russia can be achieved as it is in the interest of
all Arctic states to maintain the Arctic Council.
"We need to safeguard the Arctic Council as the most important
international forum for Arctic cooperation and make sure it
survives," Norwegian Deputy Foreign Minister Eivind Vad Petersson
told Reuters.
That will not be easy, given Oslo's own strained relations with
Moscow. In April, Oslo expelled 15 Russian diplomats saying they
were spies. Moscow denied the accusations and Korchunov said the
expulsions undermined the trust needed for cooperation.
Analysts say NATO-member Norway, which shares an Arctic border with
Russia, is still well-placed to handle the delicate balancing act
with Moscow.
"Norway has been the most outspoken when it comes to the possibility
of keeping the door ajar so that Russia could, when politically
feasible, be part of the Arctic Council again," said Svein Vigeland
Rottem, a senior researcher in Arctic governance and security at the
Fridtjof Nansen Institute in Oslo.
Indeed, said lawmaker Aaja Chemnitz Larsen, the council will
eventually need to reengage with Russia even if that moment has not
yet arrived.
"I don't see an Arctic Council without Russia in the future," said
Larsen, a Greenland lawmaker at the Danish Parliament and the Chair
of Arctic Parliamentarians, a body including MPs from across the
Arctic countries.
"We need to be prepared for a different time when the war (in
Ukraine) one day will be over."
(Reporting by Humeyra Pamuk in Washington, Gloria Dickie in London
and Gwladys Fouche in Oslo; additional reporting by Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen
in Copenhagen, Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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