Five Arctic states meet Monday in the Canadian city of Chelsea to bolster regional cooperation amid concerns of a military build-up and opposition to the tapping of its rich resources.
Five Arctic states meet Monday in the Canadian city of
Chelsea
to
bolster regional cooperation amid concerns of a military build-up and
opposition to the tapping of its rich resources.
Representatives from
Canada
,
Denmark
,
Norway
,
Russia
and
the
U.S.
will
participate in the
Quebec
talks.
The meeting comes as a global race for vast oil and gas reserves believed to be
hidden beneath the seabed intensifies, raising fears of increased commercial
activity spoiling the pristine environment.
"Over time, increased access to the region will result in new
opportunities and challenges," Canadian Foreign Minister Lawrence Cannon
said in a statement.
"It is important that we plan now for the future," he said. "
Arctic
Ocean
coastal states are in a unique position to set the agenda for
responsible management of the region."
Each of the five Arctic nations claim overlapping parts of the region estimated
to hold 90 billion untapped barrels of oil.
They pledged in 2008 to try to avoid territorial conflicts and balance economic
opportunities with conservation of this fragile ecosystem.
But a Canadian study has found a significant and worrying build-up of military
assets in the far north.
Research by Robert Huebert of the University of Calgary's Centre for Military
and Strategic Studies showed the five states have either built or announced 66
combat-capable Arctic vessels intended for or capable of operating in the
Arctic, including patrol boats, icebreakers and submarines.
Canada
also
announced a winter warfare training camp and an Arctic military port, and has
increased its northern surveillance capabilities.
Cannon said: "All of my colleagues are in a cooperative and collaborative
mood."
Others point out that
U.S.
and
Canadian geologists are jointly mapping the Arctic seabed,
Russia
and
Canada
are
working together on search-and-rescue protocols, and Danish troops will soon
join Canadians on Arctic maneuvers.
However, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev's claim mid-month that fellow Arctic
nations were sidelining
Moscow
in a
race to tap the region's resources has created confusion, and some resentment.
Medvedev said there had been "attempts to limit
Russia
's
access to the exploration and development of Arctic deposits." Medvedev
didn't specify which country, and was met with denials.
The Indigenous Environmental Network, the Council of Canadians and the
Alaska-based REDOIL Network meanwhile in an open letter called for a moratorium
on all new fossil fuel exploration in the
Arctic
.
"Increased development of Arctic oil and gas would not only contribute to
the climate crisis that is devastating Arctic communities, it would also add
more direct pressure to fragile ecosystems that are already stressed by the
combined impacts of climate change and existing development," said Daniel
T'seleie on behalf of the signatories.
The U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea stipulates that any coastal state can
claim undersea territory 200 nautical miles from their shoreline and exploit
the natural resources within that zone.
Nations can also extend that limit to up to 350 nautical miles from their coast
if they can provide scientific proof that the undersea continental plate is a
natural extension of their territory.
Moscow
believes it should also control the
Northern
Sea Route
, a passage that stretches from
Asia
to
Europe
across northern
Russia
, and
in 2007 planted a flag on the ocean floor beneath the North Pole in a symbolic
staking of its claim over the region.
Canada
meanwhile has claimed the
Northwest Passage
, but
is at odds with the
U.S.
that
considers it to be international waters.
Also,
Norway
and
Russia
contest a 176,000-square-kilometer area of the
Barents
Sea
.
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