[lit-ideas] And so it begins....

  • From: JimKandJulieB@xxxxxxx
  • To: lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sun, 25 Mar 2007 03:03:57 EDT

_Click  here: Riches await as Earth's icy north melts - Yahoo! News_ 
(http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/arctic_bonanza;_ylt=Ar17GtLHQS8yVCePnfrqyvoDW7oF)  
 
Riches await as Earth's icy north melts  
 
 
 
By DOUG MELLGREN, Associated Press Writer2  hours, 48 minutes ago  


Barren and uninhabited, Hans Island is very hard to find on a map. Yet these  
days the Frisbee-shaped rock in the Arctic is much in demand — so much so 
that  Canada and Denmark have both staked their claim to it with flags and 
warships.  The reason: an international race for oil, fish, diamonds and 
shipping 
routes,  accelerated by the impact of global warming on Earth's frozen north. 
The latest report by the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change says  
the ice cap is warming faster than the rest of the planet and ice is 
receding,  partly due to greenhouse gases. It's a catastrophic scenario for the 
Arctic 
 ecosystem, for polar bears and other wildlife, and for Inuit populations 
whose  ancient cultures depend on frozen waters. 
But some see a lucrative silver lining of riches waiting to be snatched from  
the deep, and the prospect of timesaving sea lanes that could transform the  
shipping industry the way the Suez Canal did in the 19th century. 
The U.S. Geological Survey estimates the Arctic has as much as 25 percent of  
the world's undiscovered oil and gas. Moscow reportedly sees the potential of 
 minerals in its slice of the Arctic sector approaching $2 trillion. 
All this has pushed governments and businesses into a scramble for  
sovereignty over these suddenly priceless seas. 
Regardless of climate change, oil and gas exploration in the Arctic is moving 
 full speed ahead. State-controlled Norwegian oil company Statoil ASA plans 
to  start tapping gas from its offshore Snoehvit field in December, the first 
in the  Barents Sea. It uses advanced equipment on the ocean floor, 
remote-controlled  from the Norwegian oil boom town of Hammerfest through a 
90-mile 
undersea  cable. 
Alan Murray, an analyst with the consulting firm Wood Mackenzie, said most  
petroleum companies are now focusing research and exploration on the far north. 
 Russia is developing the vast Shkotman natural gas field off its Arctic 
coast,  and Norwegians hope their advanced technology will find a place there. 
"Oil will bring a big geopolitical focus. It is a driving force in the  
Arctic," said Arvid Jensen, a consultant in Hammerfest who advises companies  
that 
hope to hitch their economic wagons to the northern rush. 
It could open the North Pole region to easy navigation for five months a  
year, according to the latest Arctic Climate Impact Assessment, an  
intergovernmental group. That could cut sailing time from Germany to Alaska by  
60 percent, 
going through Russia's Arctic instead of the Panama Canal. 
Or the Northwest Passage could open through the channels of Canada's Arctic  
islands and shorten the voyage from Europe to the Far East. And that's where  
Hans Island, at the entrance to the Northwest Passage, starts to matter. 
The half-square-mile rock, just one-seventh the size of New York's Central  
Park, is wedged between Canada's Ellesmere Island and Danish-ruled Greenland,  
and for more than 20 years has been a subject of unusually bitter exchanges  
between the two NATO allies. 

In 1984, Denmark's minister for Greenland affairs, Tom Hoeyem, caused a stir  
when he flew in on a chartered helicopter, raised a Danish flag on the 
island,  buried a bottle of brandy at the base of the flagpole and left a note 
saying:  "Welcome to the Danish island." 
The dispute erupted again two years ago when Canadian Defense Minister Bill  
Graham set foot on the rock while Canadian troops hoisted the Maple Leaf  
flag. 
Denmark sent a letter of protest to Ottawa, while Canadians and Danes took  
out competing Google ads, each proclaiming sovereignty over the rock 680 miles  
south of the North Pole. 
Some Canadians even called for a boycott of Danish pastries. 
Although both countries have repeatedly sent warships to the island to make  
their presence felt, there's no risk of a shooting war — both sides are 
resolved  to settle the problem peacefully. But the prospect of a warmer planet 
opening up  the icy waters has helped push the issue up the agenda. 
"We all realize that because of global warming it will suddenly be an area  
that will become more accessible," said Peter Taksoe-Jensen, head of the Danish 
 Foreign Ministry's legal department. 
Shortcuts through Arctic waters are no longer the stuff of science fiction.  
In August 2005, the Akademik Fyodorov of Russia was the first ship to reach  
the North Pole without icebreaker help. The Norwegian shipyard Aker Yards is  
building innovative vessels that sail forward in clear waters, and then turn  
around to plow with their sterns through heavier ice.  
Global warming is also bringing an unexpected bonus to American  
transportation company OmniTrax Inc., which a decade ago bought the small  
underutilized 
Northwest Passage port of Churchill, Manitoba, for a token fee of  10 Canadian 
dollars (about $8).  
The company, which is private, won't say how much money it is making in  
Churchill, but it was estimated to have moved more than 500,000 tons of grain  
through the port in 2007.  
Managing director Michael Ogborn said climate change was not something the  
company thought about in 1997.  
"But over the last 10 years we saw a lengthening of the season, which appears 
 to be related to global warming," Ogborn said. "We see the trend 
continuing."  
Just a few years ago, reports said it would take 100 years for the ice to  
melt, but recent studies say it could happen in 10-15 years, and the United  
States, Canada, Russia, Denmark and Norway have been rushing to stake their  
claims in the Arctic.  
Norway and Russia have issues in the Barents Sea; the U.S. and Russia in  
Beaufort Sea; the U.S. and Canada over rights to the Northwest Passage; and 
even  
Alaska and Canada's Yukon province over their offshore boundary.  
Canada, Russia and Denmark are seeking to claim waters all the way up to the  
North Pole, saying the seabed is part of their continental shelf under the 
1982  United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. Norway wants to extend 
its  claims on the same basis, although not all the way to the pole.  
Canada says the Northwest Passage is its territory, a claim the United States 
 hotly disputes, insisting the waters are neutral. Canadian Prime Minister  
Stephen Harper has pledged to put military icebreakers in the frigid waters "to 
 assert our sovereignty and take action to protect our territorial 
integrity."  
Politics aside, there are environmental concerns. Apart from the risk of oil  
spills, more vessels could carry alien organisms into the Northwest Passage,  
posing a risk to indigenous life forms.  
The Arctic melt has also been intensifying competition over dwindling fishing 
 stocks.  
Fish stocks essential to some regions appear to be moving to colder waters,  
and thus into another country's fishing grounds. Russian and Norwegian 
fishermen  already report catching salmon much farther north than is normal.  
"It is potentially very dramatic for fish stocks. They could move toward the  
North Pole, which would make sovereignty very unclear," said Dag Vongraven, 
an  environmental expert at the Norwegian Polar Institute.  
Russia contests Norway's claims to fish-rich waters around the Arctic  
Svalbard Islands, and has even sent warships there to underscore its discontent 
 
with the Norwegian Coast Guard boarding Russian trawlers there.  
"Even though they say it is about fish, it is really about oil," said Jensen, 
 the consultant in Hammerfest.  
In 2004, Russian President Vladimir Putin called the sovereignty issue "a  
serious, competitive battle" that "will unfold more and more fiercely."  
With all the squabbling over ownership, Tristan Pearce, a research associate  
at the University of Guelph's Global Environmental Change Group in Canada,  
reminded Arctic nations of who got there first: indigenous peoples like the  
Inuits and the Sami.  
"Everybody is talking about the potential for minerals, diamonds, oil and  
gas, but we mustn't forget that people live there, all the way across the  
Arctic," he said. "They've always been there and they have a major role to  
play."  
___  
Associated Press reporters Beth Duff-Brown in Toronto, Phil Couvrette in  
Montreal, Mike Eckel in Moscow, Dan Joling in Anchorage, Alaska, and Karl 
Ritter  
in Stockholm, Sweden, contributed to this report. 




 
Copyright © 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. The  information 
contained in the AP News report may not be published, broadcast,  rewritten or 
redistributed without the prior written authority of The Associated  Press. 





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