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  • Arctic Frontiers 2013

    Arctic Frontiers 2013

    Arctic Frontiers

    The 2013 Arctic Frontiers in Tromso Norway is just about to start. This years themes are Geopolitics & Marine Production in a Changing Arctic.

    The organizers will be broadcasting the whole of the policy section on Monday 21 January live on the internet in English and Russian and on Tuesday 22 January in English and Norwegian.

    To connect to the online stream, please follow this link.
    Here are the links for the 22nd of January:

    Here is the full program of the conference.

    Source

    Arctic Frontiers

  • The keyword is “Change”

    The keyword is “Change”

    First policy session of the Arctic Frontiers 2013

    New opportunities create new challenges. The present and close future creates the challenge of how to explore, develop and manage the great resources of the Arctic Region. New commercial activities and growing business community, together with democratic dynamics are to alter long time established social structures in the Arctic Region.

    Non – Arctic Asian and European states and organizations increase their interest in the Arctic.

    Policy session of the 7th Arctic Frontiers conference, that takes place in Tromso, northern Norway, addresses the contemporary and emerging political issues for the changing Arctic. How do states in and outside the region prepare strategically for the new Arctic reality?

    How does the global security architecture impact on security in the Arctic? How important is Arctic oil and gas production for global demand and the energy security of various states? How will traditional businesses interact with new industry, and if and how will profits from industrial activities benefit the people living in the High North.

    Those questions will be answered during the first two days of the 7th Arctic Frontiers that are taking place in Tromso, northern part of Norway. The conference will last until the 25th of January. It is divided into policy and science sessions. The policy sessions will be held today and tomorrow while the scientists will present their research during the next three days.

    For more information, please be referred to the conference website.

    Source

    Arctic Frontiers website

  • First Icelander to reach it solo

    First Icelander to reach it solo

    Vilborg Arna Gissurardóttir practising before the journey

    Vilborg Arna Gissurardóttir yesterday became the first Icelander to walk to the South Pole alone and without assistance. Vilborg reached the pole last night after very hard conditions yesterday.

    She said that she was laughing and crying when she realized she was making her dream come true.

    She walked for 60 days, in total 1140km and celebrated by having potatoes and bacon on the Pole.

    She was raising money for the women’s clinic at the Icelandic national hospital and expects to dwell on the Pole over the weekend.

    Vilborg has a long journey home to Iceland where she is looking to rest after mental and physical hard work over the last two months, plus the years in preparation.

    Sources

    Mbl.is

    Vilborgs website

  • Mammal invasion in Russia?

    Mammal invasion in Russia?

    Reindeers in the arctic

    By 2080, Russia might witness a vast mammalian invasion, as sub-arctic European animals flee global warming and adapt to a thawing tundra. This is the result of a newly published study in the journal PloS One.

    “North Western Russia will be some kind of hotspot of species richness,” said Christer Nilsson, an ecology professor, via Skype from Umeå University in Sweden to the website Mother Jones. “Species will be on the move and there will be new combinations of species.”

    Red and fallow deer, wild boar, the Eurasian badger, rabbits, mice and beaver will all be on the move as new tracts of habitable land open up.

    In a surprising twist, Professor Nilsson and his team found that most species in the Barents Region, which includes the northern half of Norway, Sweden, Finland and a big chunk of North Western Russian, will actually be favored by climate change.

    Forty-three out of the 61 animals studied will expand and shift their “ranges”—or habitats—mostly in a north-easterly direction, sometimes traveling hundreds of miles.

    But no one can predict how all the animals will interact in their new, climate-changed world, and far from helping animals, climate change might force new, and deadly, interactions: “Predators might be in contact with new prey,” Nilsson said.

    The report found something encouraging: No extinctions predicted in the area surveyed. “We couldn’t find any evidence that any species will disappear, given the climate change predictions we’ve used,” Nilsson said. Nevertheless, vulnerability of those already threatened may increase due to the introduction of new competing or predatory species.

    Sources

    Mother Jones

    Plosone

  • Greenland will not favor EU over China

    Greenland will not favor EU over China

    town in Greenland

    The prime minister of Greenland says he will not favour the EU over China or other investors when granting access to highly prized rare earth minerals. Kuupik Kleist said it would not be fair “to protect others’ interests more than protecting, for instance, China’s”.

    The BBC reports and points out that Greenland is not in the EU, even though Denmark is.

    The EU, US and Japan are in dispute with China over its restrictions on exports of rare earths.

    China currently produces 97% of the world’s rare earths, vital in the manufacture of mobile phones and other high-tech products.

    The dispute has gone to the World Trade Organization (WTO). Last year China argued that its export restrictions were needed to protect the environment, conserve supplies and meet domestic demand.

    Currently Greenland’s rare earth resources are being intensively investigated. The European Commission estimates that those resources could total 9.16% of the global rare earth deposits.

    “All are welcome if they meet our conditions and our requirements to operate in Greenland,” Mr Kleist said.

    The EU sees “especially strong potential” in Greenland’s deposits of niobium, platinum, rare earths and tantalum, among the elements on an EU “critical raw materials” list.

    The share of European exploration companies operating in Greenland is only 15%. More than 50% are from Canada and Australia.

    Mr Kleist, speaking in the Danish capital Copenhagen, said Greenland needed to develop its resources, as it was too reliant on fishing and subsidies from Denmark.

    “I do not see thousands of Chinese workers in the country as a threat,” he said, quoted by Denmark’s Ritzau news agency. He vowed to resist EU pressure concerning Greenland’s policy on rare earths.

    Source

    BBC

  • New Arctic Council minister visits Iceland

    New Arctic Council minister visits Iceland

    Leona Aglukkaq and Össur at the meeting

    The Icelandic Minister for Foreign Affairs, Össur Skarphéðinsson met with Ms. Leona Aglukkaq, Canada’s health minister and newly appointed Minister of Arctic Affairs in Iceland yesterday.
    Following her visit to Reykjavík, Aglukkaq will travel to the other Nordic states to introduce Canada’s Chairmanship Programme for the Arctic Council.

    At their meeting the ministers discussed cooperation between the countries and the their policies within the Arctic Council as Canada will take on the chairmanship of the Arctic Council at the council’s ministerial meeting in Kiruna May 15.

    Leona Aglukkaq who will lead the chairmanship, said Canada’s overarching theme would be promoting projects that have practical implications for the inhabitants of the region, including economic growth and the development of natural resources in a sustainable manner, safer Arctic shipping, engagement with industry and the business community and cultural cooperation within the Circumpolar region.

    “Our main agenda is development of the people in the Arctic, sustainable and safe exploitation of resources and safe shipping in the Arctic,” she told Morgunblaðið.

    The Foreign Minister expressed his view that strong regional and political cooperation within the Arctic Council, aimed at constructive projects and agreements is one of the pillars of Iceland’s Arctic policy. The Minsters agreed on the importance of strengthening practical cooperation of the Arctic States on responses to environmental disasters, e.g. by supporting prevention and responses to shipping accidents and oil spill in the Arctic.

    The Foreign Minister also emphasized the importance of developing further ideas on economic cooperation with the possible establishment of Circumpolar Chamber of Commerce. The issue of permanent observers was discussed and the future development of the Arctic Council and its role in the global context.

    After her meeting with the Foreign Minister, Ms. Aglukkaq met Ms. Svandísi Svavarsdóttir, Minister for the Environment and Natural Resources and experts from institutes working with Arctic affairs in Iceland.

    Sources

    Ministry of Foreign Affairs

    Morgunblaðið

    The Arctic Council website

  • Joint Arctic defense strategy?

    Joint Arctic defense strategy?

    Satellite station in the arctic

    Two Arctic states might join military forces in the Arctic. Sweden and Finland have held talks about a joint weaponary and it is a central part of Sweden’s vision for Nordic Defence cooperation. Sweden is looking for a joint Nordic policy in foreign affairs, secutiry and defense strategy.

    Foreign Minister Carl Bildt and Defense Minister Karin Enstrom have written the proposal.

    “We want to create a more efficient use of resources, higher quality, better effects and an expanded variety of defence capabilities through cooperation”, the two ministers write, according to the BarentsObserver.

    “Joint ownership and use of military capacities and resources, so-called pooling and sharing, is a central part of the Swedish vision for Nordic defence cooperation”, they underline.

    The Finnish side positively responds to the Swedish proposal. Defence Minister Carl Haglund says to Yle that the possible conclusion of a treaty with Sweden is worth thorough examination, but believes that such an agreement can come only after “several years”.

    “Indeed, in practice this would mean that we should have some kind of defense agreement with Sweden, because we would be talking about crucial capabilities, for example in the navy or the air force,” Haglund says.

    At the same time, the Finns are reluctant to get Norway on board. Haglund underlines that “in any case, Nordic NATO member countries should not be included in this cooperation”.

    Sources

    BarentsObserver
    Dagens Nyheder
    Yle

  • Trapped whales now free

    Trapped whales now free

    Orca in arctic waters

    The whales who were trapped in sea ice in Hudson Bay, Canada, are now free. The ice shifted away and the whales are free and safe after being trapped for two days.In our original story yesterday we reported that the town asked for an icebreaker to assist the whales. There was only a small patch of open water for the whales to breathe, and the gap was shrinking.

    Video of the whales can be seen here.

    A hunter spotted the whales and now the government is looking at its options. Peter Inukpuk, mayor of the small Inuit village, called on the Department of Fisheries and Oceans (DFO) to send out an icebreaker to help the whales.

    Source

    CBC News

  • Cold winter conditions in the Arctic

    Cold winter conditions in the Arctic

    Climate conditions have been negative

    States for 2012 was climate conditions in Scandinavia, Siberia, Alaska and Canada have been colder than average this winter.

    The National Snow and Ice Data Center reports that the Arctic sea ice extent for December 2012 was well below average, driven by anomalously low ice conditions in the Kara, Barents, and Labrador seas.

    NSIDC states that the winter has been dominated by the negative phase of the Arctic Oscillation, bringing the cold climate around the Arctic.

    The Arctic Oscillation is an Arctic climate index with positive and negative phases, which represents the state of atmospheric circulation over the Arctic. The positive phase brings lower-than-normal pressure over the polar region, steering ocean storms northward, bringing wetter weather to Scotland and Scandinavia, and drier conditions to areas such as Spain and the Middle East.

    Reports today also show that the average temperature for USA for 2012 was above average, showing different climate than in the Arctic, outside of Alaska.

    Sources

    NSIDC

    NOAA 1

    NOAA 2

  • Winter tourists spend more

    Winter tourists spend more

    Aurora Borealis seen from Iceland

    Winter tourists spend three times more money than summer tourists, a tour operator in Norway says. The Arctic countries all have active tourism and are constantly marketing winter tourism as an alternative for the summer period.

    “Hotels in Northern Norway now have a higher number of filled beds in winter time than in summer. That is because the region offers what few other destinations can; a mix of winter and ocean. Only the Barents region, Alaska and Iceland are competing for tourists looking for experiences like these”, says Morten Torp from Vinter Troms AS.

    Iceland has seen a big increase in winter tourism with specialized northern lights trips increasingly popular.

    In Norway, Espen Berelsen sees that tourist are willing to pay a higher premium for experiences out of the ordinary. An example Bertelsen often uses; “Who wouldn’t want to come home to their friends and family and tell about the great combination of beautiful sailings along the coast of Lofoten and skiing down the Lyngen Alps toward the clean Arctic fjords? People will pay a premium for an experience like that.”

    Alaska has also utilized its oil history for tourism as well as the ice road truckers. Alaska offers northern lights experiences like Iceland and Norway.

    Sources

    BarentsObserver

    Alaska Dispatch