|
From: Reuters
Published August 12, 2008 10:26 AM
U.S. ship heads for Arctic to define territory
| NEW YORK (Reuters) - A U.S. Coast Guard cutter will embark on an
Arctic voyage this week to determine the extent of the continental shelf
north of Alaska and map the ocean floor, data that could be used for oil
and natural gas exploration. |
 |
U.S. and University of New Hampshire scientists on the Coast Guard Cutter
Healy will leave Barrow, Alaska, on Thursday on a three-week journey. They
will create a three-dimensional map of the Arctic Ocean floor in a
relatively unexplored area known as the Chukchi borderland.
The Healy will launch again on September 6, when it will be joined by
Canadian scientists aboard an icebreaker, who will help collect data to
determine the thickness of sediment in the region. That is one factor a
country can use to define its extended continental shelf.
With oil at $114 a barrel, after hitting a record $147 in July, and sea ice
melting fast, countries like Russia and the United States are looking north
for possible energy riches.
"These are places nobody's gone before, in essence, so this is a first
step," said Margaret Hays, the director of the oceanic affairs office at the
U.S. State Department. She said the data collected may provide information
to the public about future oil and natural gas sources for the United
States.
This will be the fourth year that the United States has collected data to
define the limits of its continental shelf in the Arctic.
Russia, which has claimed 460,000 square miles of Arctic waters, last summer
planted its flag on the ocean floor of the North Pole.
Hays said the Alaskan continental shelf may lie up to 600 nautical miles
from the coastline, far beyond the 200-mile (322-km) limit where coastal
countries have sovereign rights over natural resources.
The research could also shed light on other potential energy resources, like
methane frozen in ice under the ocean, that Hays said might one day have
some commercial interest.
Larry Mayer, a university scientist, said melting sea ice, presumably from
global warming, helped last year's mission. "It was bad for the Arctic, but
very very good for mapping."

|