Blog

  • Last lecture of Nansen´s professor

    Last lecture of Nansen´s professor

    Dr. Loukacheva at the Trans - Arctic Agenda conference.

    Tomorrow, 15th of January at the University of Akureyri, conference hall, dr. Natalia Loukacheva will give a public lecture titled: “Developing Arctic – from Nansen to modern times”. The lecture will take place in room M101 12.00 – 13.00 h and it is open for public.

    Dr. Natalia Loukacheva is a scholar of comparative constitutional and international law with research interests in the circumpolar region, covering eight Arctic States. She was educated at the Urals State Law Academy, Yekaterinburg, Russia (Diploma with Honours in Jurisprudence, 1991-1996; Ph.D. law at the Department of International and Comparative Constitutional Law, 1999) and at the Faculty of Law, University of Toronto, Canada (S.J.D. – Doctor of Juridical Science degree, 2004).

    Last year dr. Loukacheva was awarded Nansen visiting professorship in Arctic studies.

    The professorship is awarded each year for a twelve months period to a leading scientist working with issues that bear on the legal, economic, social and natural circumstances in the Arctic. It is awarded each year for a twelve months period to a leading scientist working with issues that bear on the legal, economic, social and natural circumstances in the Arctic.

  • MobilityDK offers travel support

    arctic fjord

    Travel support is now available for students, teachers and researchers from Uarctic members to and from Danish, Greenlandic and Faroease institutions for Arctic – relevant mobility activities.

    The second application round for MobilityDK is now open.

    The MobilityDK pilot model provides travel support for students, staff and researchers from UArctic member institutions, and it is available for Arctic-relevant mobility to and from Danish, Greenlandic and Faroese institutions.

    The deadline for applications is January 31st, 2014.

  • WTO engaged in EU fishing dispute

    WTO engaged in EU fishing dispute

    Fish farm outside of Thorshaven

    The Faroe Islands is seeking to bring its dispute with the EU over their herring and mackerel exports to the World Trade Organisation.

    The Danish mission to Gevena filed a request to establish a WTO panel in the dispute, which pits the Faroe Islands, a self-governing member of the Danish Kingdom, against the EU, which it is not a member of.

    The request will be dealt with at a forthcoming meeting of the WTO dispute settlement body on January 20.

    Last November, the Faroe Islands announced that it had started WTO dispute settlement proceedings against the EU to challenge the bloc’s trade sanctions against Faroese herring and mackerel.
    The sanctions, introduced last August, ban all imports of herring and mackerel products from the Faroe Islands, and deny access to EU ports by vessels transporting these products. The measures set up the awkward situation of Faroese ships being unable to call on Danish ports.

    In a statement accompanying the announcement, Kai Leo Johannesen, the Faroese premier, pointed out that his country was heavily dependent on fish exports, which he said constituted more than 95 percent of total Faroese exports.
    “This step is therefore of major importance for the Faroe Islands, and a crucial step in order to ensure that the EU’s coercive economic measure, whose purpose is exclusively to safeguard the interests of its domestic industry, will be withdrawn and revoked.”
    The ban against Faroese fish products has repercussions in Denmark, where Danish fishing boats have been banned from Norwegian waters due to the conflict.

    The EU can oppose the request to set up a panel during the January meeting, but EU regulations require that the matter be taken up the following month to attempt to mediate the dispute. Previous attempts at resolution have failed.

    Click here for more articles about EU – Faroese fishing dispute.

    Source: the Arctic Journal 
  • 5th Arctic Business Forum announced

    5th Arctic Business Forum announced

    Rovaniemi spring impressions

    The 5th Arctic Business Forum meeting will be held in Rovaniemi, northern Finland. The conference will be taking place from March 11th – 13th 2014.

    This annual event will introduce the latest business development and future prospects of the rising Arctic economy as a vital part of worldwide developments.

    Two days of world class presentations by invited speakers, a trade show and a high class social program in the very heart of Lapland Finland make the event an excellent opportunity for anyone interested in the arctic business development in terms of business opportunities and networking, exchanging ideas, insight and learning experience.

    The following current issues will be featured by the presentations:

    • What effects climate change has on Arctic business
    • Arctic sea routes and the influence on other transport methods
    • Shale gas developments and effects on arctic oil & gas industry
    • Raw material prices – is mining still profitable and sustainable
    • Best practices
    • how do SME’s get in and part of the large scale projects

    Additional information with program and registration details available at www.arcticbusinessforum.com 

    The conference is organized by Lapland Chamber of Commerce, Finland.

  • Outcome of AsiArctic work now available

    Outcome of AsiArctic work now available

    FNI

    The Arctic Region is increasingly becoming a place of international attention. As the ice melts, new opportunities and challenges arise. Asian states which previously had little interest in the area are taking a greater interest in the Arctic.

    In the AsiArctic research program we, researchers from the Fridtjof Nansen Institute (FNI) and the Norwegian Institute for Defense Studies (IFS), aim to contribute new and relevant knowledge on the Arctic interests of China, Japan, Korea and India.

    The most recent outcome of AsiArctic work is the FNI report concerning Greenland´s future and the emerging relations between Greenland and the EU, China and South Korea.

    The report explores the Greenlandic government’s recent strategies to establish a large-scale extraction industry in its territory, focusing especially on Greenland’s developing ties to the EU, China and South Korea.

    The report links the Greenlandic government’s international outreach to the territory’s aspirations for full independence from Denmark, showing how mounting international interest in Arctic resources serves to strengthen the idea of Greenland as a independent actor.

    The aim of this report is to highlight how the creation of a sovereign image is at the centre of state building efforts in Greenland, and how, by taking advantage of the mounting global interest in the Arctic, Greenland is able to effectively increase its international agency.

    This report takes a constructivist approach to sovereignty, and the work of Cynthia Weber and Thomas Biersteker forms its theoretical core.

    The report is now available at the Arctic Portal on line library. Click here for the quick download.

  • Arctic Frontiers 2014 coming soon

    Arctic Frontiers 2014 coming soon

    Zhao Jun during Arctic Frontiers 2013

    Arctic Frontiers 2014 will be held at the University of Tromsø, Norway from Sunday 19 to Friday 24 January 2014. The theme of the conference is ‘Humans in the Arctic’.

    As with previous years the policy section will run for the first two days (Monday 20 and Tuesday 21 January 2014) followed by three days of science (Wednesday 22 January to Friday 24 January).

    Click here to register for the conference. To see the detailed programs for the policy and science sections, please access the conference website.

  • Arctic Christmas, Christianity and beliefs

    Arctic Christmas, Christianity and beliefs

    The Coke Santa-clausNow in the Arctic region, as elsewhere, the time of Christmas has started, except for in the Russian Arctic. In various regions in the Arctic, Christmas is a quite new idea which was introduced by western missionaries. The North has been a periphery for western civilization for numerous years and western Christmas traditions do not root so deep within Arctic communities.

    Everywhere along the Arctic, Christianity was brought upon, pronounced or forced to the residents in the Arctic region. As a result, vast majority of all Arctic residents are affiliated with some form of Christianity. Various Protestant churches dominate in northern Fennoscandia, Iceland, the Faroe Islands, Greenland, Alaska, and parts of northern Canada, while the Russian Orthodox Church is prevalent in the Arctic regions of the Russian Federation and in addition has limited presence in Alaska and parts of Finland.

    Finally, the Roman Catholic Church is particularly strong in parts of Canada and Alaska. There is considerable variation as to when Christianity reached different parts of the Arctic. While it happened almost 1,000 years ago in northernmost Europe, the inhabitants of the Chukchi Peninsula in the Russian Far East had little first-hand experience with Christianity before the 1990s. Generally speaking, the 18th and 19th centuries were the major periods of religious conversion in the Arctic. There have been various attempts to explain the rapid conversion of Arctic peoples to Christianity. Most authors agree that a combination of several factors is responsible. The adoption of Christianity rarely, if ever, resulted in the simple replacement of one religious system by another. Instead, old and new beliefs were reintegrated within a new system that was both Christian and local (Arctic Human Development Report).

    Even though Christianity was brought to the Arctic region, old pagan beliefs persist among Arctic residents. All northern indigenous peoples believe that there is a close relationship between humans and nature. Humans and animals are said to be able to understand each other. Animals were said to have spirits which affect the fortune of humans.

    Angry spirits caused illness and benign spirits helped the hunter by guiding animals into his path. Traditionally, the wishes of the spirits could be found out by a spirit medium called a shaman. In a special ritual performance, the shaman would go into a trance. It was thought that the shaman’s soul had left his or her body and flown to the land of the spirits. Here, the shaman would try to get back the soul of a sick person which had been captured by the spirits, or to get the spirits to promise that the hungry community would catch an animal (The Arctic Is). These believes are called shamanism and animism.

    However, Some of these beliefs have grown weaker during this century under the influence of Christian missionaries, teachers and government officials. For a long time, indigenous peoples themselves turned their backs of these beliefs in order to appear ‘modern’. But many ideas about the relationship between humans and animals remain strong. Some Inuit in Greenland still whisper ‘thank you’ to a seal they have just killed (The Arctic Is).

    Winter Solstice

    The complexity of modern Christmas celebrations should be seen in a historical perspective. In the early Christian Church, Easter, not Christmas, was the most important religious feast. Christmas celebrations only gained importance in the 4th century AD. The Roman Church adopted the date of December 25, celebrated by the Romans as the winter solstice. The choice expresses the close connection between Christ and the sun in early Christian religion. Christ rapidly adopted striking features of the sun god Helios such as the halo. In the Roman Empire the celebration of Christmas replaced the feast of Sol Invictus, the rebirth of the sun at December 25.

    The seasonal significance of the winter solstice is in the reversal of the gradually lengthening nights and shortening days. How cultures interpret this is varied, since it is sometimes said to astronomically mark either the beginning or middle of a hemisphere’s winter. Winter is a subjective term, so there is no scientifically established beginning or middle of winter but the winter solstice itself is clearly calculated to within a second. Though the winter solstice lasts an instant, the term is also colloquially used to refer to the full 24-hour period of the day on which it occurs. Worldwide, interpretation of the event has varied from culture to culture, but most cultures have held recognition of rebirth, involving holidays, festivals, gatherings, rituals or other celebrations around that time (Wikipedia).

    However, by a description of Franz Boas, the celebration of winter in an Inuit community in Qiqirtat (Kekerten Island, Canada), feast was not connected to the winter solstice, but prepared the hunting of the winter season. In the course of the ritual the success of the hunt is assessed in various divinatory games such as the tug-of-war of the ptarmigans and the ducks. Thus we may infer from the structure of the ritual that the relationship to the spirits of the dead is decisive in determining the success of the hunt. It is remarkable that the animals themselves never are partners in the ritual interactions between the Inuit with either the spirits of the dead or Sedna and her representatives, the qailertetang (Le Journal de la Société des Américanistes)

    BeiweThe Saami, indigenous people of Finland, Sweden and Norway, worship Beiwe, the sun-goddess of fertility and sanity. She travels through the sky in a structure made of reindeer bones with her daughter, Beiwe-Neia, to herald back the greenery on which the reindeer feed. On the winter solstice, her worshipers sacrifice white female animals, and with the meat, thread and sticks, bed into rings with ribbons. They also cover their doorposts with butter so Beiwe can eat it and begin her journey once again (Wikipedia).

    In Scandinavia and Iceland the arrival of Juletid (Christmas) came to refer to the midwinter celebrations. By the late Viking Age, the Yule celebrations came to specify a great solstitial Midwinter festival that amalgamated the traditions of various midwinter celebrations across Europe, like Mitwinternacht, Modrasnach, Midvinterblot, and the Teutonic solstice celebration, Feast of the Dead. A documented example of this is in 960, when King Håkon of Norway signed into law that Jul was to be celebrated on the night leading into December 25, to align it with the Christian celebrations. For some Norse sects, Yule logs were lit to honor Thor, the god of thunder. Feasting would continue until the log burned out, three or as many as twelve days. The indigenous lore of the Icelandic Jól continued beyond the Middle Ages, but was condemned when the Reformation arrived.

    The celebration continues today throughout Northern Europe and elsewhere in name and traditions, for Christians as representative of the nativity of Jesus on the night of December 24th, and for others as a cultural winter celebration on the 24th or for some, the date of the solstice (Wikipedia).

    Modern Christmas Celebration

    Even though the traditional Christian belief of Christmas is predominant, many local customs and traditions live along the culture among the Arctic and they root to their old pagan roots. In Scandinavia the equaliant for Santa Claus is the Tomte or Nisse. It is a mythical creature of Scandinavian folklore originating from Norse paganism. Tomte or Nisse were believed to take care of a farmer’s home and children and protect them from misfortune, in particular at night, when the housefolk were asleep. Tomte is a common Swedish name, derived from his place of residence and area of influence: the house lot or tomt. The Finnish name is tonttu. Nisse is the common name in Norwegian and Danish.

    HurdaskellirThe Yule Lads, Yulemen, or Jólasveinarnir are figures from Icelandic folklore who in modern times have become the Icelandic vector of Santa Claus and are in total of 13. The Yule Lads were originally portrayed as being mischievous, or even criminal, pranksters that would steal from, or in other way harass the population (at the time mostly rural farmers).

    They all had descriptive names that conveyed their mode of operation. The Yule Lads are traditionally said to be the sons of the mountain-dwelling trolls Grýla and Leppalúði. Additionally, the Yule Lads are often depicted with the Yuletide Cat, a beast that, according to folklore, eats children that don’t receive new clothes in time for Christmas.

    In the culture of the eastern Slavs the traditional character Ded Moroz plays a role similar to that of Santa Claus. The literal translation of the name would be Grandfather Frost. Ded Moroz brings presents to children. However, unlike the secretive ways of Santa Claus, he often brings them in person, at the celebrations of the New Year, at New Year parties for kids by the New Year Tree.

    The “in-person” gifts only occur at big organized celebrations, where the gifts can be “standardized.” The clandestine operations of placing the gifts under the New Year tree still occur while the children are young. Ded Moroz is accompanied by Snegurochka or ‘Snow Maiden’ , his granddaughter. The traditional appearance of Ded Moroz has a close resemblance to that of Santa Claus, with his coat, boots and long white beard. Specifically, Ded Moroz wears a heel-long fur coat, a semi-round fur hat, and white valenki or high boots (sapogi), silver or red with silver ornament. Unlike Santa Claus, he walks with a long magical staff, and drives no reindeer but a troika (Wikipedia).

    Santa on the NorthpoleNowadays, The traditional western Santa Claus is considered to be an Arctic resident. While his exact location is not known, there are some strong beliefs that his whereabouts are at the North Pole where he has his toy factory. However scientists have not yet discovered the Santa Clause home even though that various observations have been taken place in the Arctic, close to the North Pole and on the Pole itself. Dispite that fact, Santa Claus still appears every year and brings joy to thousands of peoples all across the world.

    Due to that fact alone, people should be aware of the changing climate and global warming, for the Santa´s workshop might be at risk.

    The Arctic Portal staff wishes all it´s readers and users Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!

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  • China-Nordic Arctic Research Center

    China-Nordic Arctic Research Center

    Jia Guide Vice Director of Department of Treaty and Law at Chinas Ministry of Foreign Affairs

    On December 10th 2013, the Polar Research Institute of China (PRIC), and six institutes from the Nordic countries as well as three other institutes from China signed a Cooperation Agreement on the China-Nordic Arctic Research Center (CNARC) to formally mark the inauguration of CNARC. Attendants to the inauguration ceremony included representatives from the State Oceanic Administration, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of China, diplomats in China from the Arctic countries, business leaders, as well as Chinese and Nordic Arctic scholars.

    Scientists from China and the Nordic countries have already established strong links in Arctic science cooperation. The idea of CNARC, to strengthen cooperation in this field even further, was supported during the official visit of former Prime Minister of China, Wen Jiabao, to Iceland in April 2012. Following his visit and in order to promote wider Arctic cooperation PRIC and the Icelandic Center of Research (RANNIS) suggested to expand the cooperation from China-Iceland to involve all the Nordic countries in this Arctic research cooperation.

    Stefan Skjaldarson Ambassador Icelandic Embassy in China

    Subsequently, in June 2013, during the first China-Nordic Arctic Cooperation Symposium held in Shanghai, PRIC proposed to establish CNARC. The proposal received positive response from Chinese and Nordic institutes, which provided the foundation for the establishment of CNARC.

    The CNARC provides a platform for academic cooperation to increase awareness, understanding and knowledge of the Arctic and its global impacts; and promote cooperation for sustainable development of the Nordic Arctic and coherent development of China in a global context.

    CNARC focuses on the Nordic Arctic and global Arctic issues, with its research themes including:

    1. Arctic climate change and its impacts,
    2. Arctic resources, shipping and economic cooperation and
    3. Arctic policy-making and legislation.

    The cooperation of CNARC will include the following four modes of activities:

    • carrying out joint research projects,
    • developing Arctic research networks and frontiers by providing opportunities for Chinese and Nordic scholars to conduct Arctic research through fellowships and scholarships,
    • convening regularly the China-Nordic Arctic Cooperation Symposium and other workshops and
    • facilitating information sharing and cultural exchange between China and Nordic countries in Arctic context.

    CNARC is supported by an Assembly of Member Institutes and a secretariat. The Assembly of Member Institutes consists of representatives from Chinese and Nordic institutes with capacities to influence, coordinate and implement Arctic research. The secretariat is based at PRIC. Following the inauguration the first Assembly of Member Institutes took place in order to discuss the operation mechanism of CNARC and its work plan for 2014.

    CNARC inauguration

    List of CNARC member institutes:

    Nordic member institutes

    • Arctic Center of the University of Lapland (Finland)
    • Fridtjof Nansen Institute (Norway)
    • Icelandic Center for Research (Iceland)
    • Nordic Institute of Asian Studies (Denmark)
    • Norwegian Polar Institute (Norway)
    • Swedish Polar Research Secretariat (Sweden)

    Chinese member institutes

    • Center for Polar and Oceanic Studies, Tongji University
    • Research Institute of Polar Law and Politics, Ocean University of China
    • Shanghai Institutes of International Studies
    • Strategic Studies Division, Polar Research Institute of China

    Click here to see the lilst of event´s participants. Click here to view the photos from the event.

  • More oil discovered in Skavl

    More oil discovered in Skavl

    Oil platform on Barents Sea

    Statoil has recently reported to find more oil resources in the Barents Sea. The hydrocarbon discovery at the Skavl prospect could increase the chances for a new field centre development in the Arctic, says Atle Staalensen from the Barents Observer.

    According to Statoil, the Skavl prospect includes up to 50 million barrels of extractable resources. The well drilled by the rig West Hercules is located only few kilometers from the Johan Castberg and Havis structures in the Barents Sea.

    The new project includes modest volumes of oil, but could still increase the likelihood of a major field development in the area. After finding the Castberg and Havis fields in 2011, Statoil announced that a major breakthrough had been made in the Barents Sea, calling the fields in “the most important discoveries on the Norwegian shelf over the last ten years”.

    Statoil is an international energy company with operations in 34 different countries.

    Statoil is operator for production licence PL532 with an ownership share of 50 percent. The licence partners are Eni Norge AS (30%) and Petoro AS (20%).

    Source: Barents Observer

  • IASC Christmas edition

    Over the past two decades, IASC has been organizing forward-looking conferences focused on international and interdisciplinary perspectives for advancing Arctic research cooperation and applications of Arctic knowledge. In 2015, it will have been 10 years since the ICARP II and 20 years since the first ICARP in 1995.

    The political and economic interests in the Arctic are already multifold what they were just 5 years ago, and consequently national funding agencies and various large companies have a marked interest in Arctic science. Consequently, new Polar/Arctic research programs are currently being developed and some have already launched.

    More programs require improved coordination in order to secure the best value for funding spent. Agreeing on shared objectives, across Arctic states as well as internationally is becoming increasingly important.

    The International Arctic Science Committee (IASC) is a non-governmental, international scientific organization. The IASC mission is to encourage and facilitate cooperation in all aspects of Arctic research, in all countries engaged in Arctic research and in all areas of the Arctic region.

    Overall, IASC promotes and supports leading-edge multi-disciplinary research in order to foster a greater scientific understanding of the Arctic region and its role in the Earth system.

    Click here to read the full Christmas report on IASC.