Could Arctic Ice Melt Spawn New Kind Of Cold War?
US: March 10, 2008
WASHINGTON - With oil above $100 a barrel and Arctic ice melting faster than
ever, some of the world's most powerful countries -- including the United
States and Russia -- are looking north to a possible energy bonanza.
This prospective scramble for buried Arctic mineral wealth made more
accessible by freshly melted seas could bring on a completely different kind
of cold war, a scholar and former Coast Guard officer says.
While a US government official questioned the risk of polar conflict,
Washington still would like to join a 25-year-old international treaty meant
to figure out who owns the rights to the oceans, including the Arctic Ocean.
So far, the Senate has not approved it.
Unlike the first Cold War, dominated by tensions between the two late-20th
century superpowers, this century's model could pit countries that border
the Arctic Ocean against each other to claim mineral rights. The Arctic
powers include the United States, Russia, Canada, Denmark and Norway.
The irony is that the burning of fossil fuels is at least in part
responsible for the Arctic melt -- due to climate change -- and the Arctic
melt could pave the way for a 21st century rush to exploit even more fossil
fuels.
The stakes are enormous, according to Scott Borgerson of the Council on
Foreign Relations, a former US Coast Guard lieutenant commander.
The Arctic could hold as much as one-quarter of the world's remaining
undiscovered oil and gas deposits, Borgerson wrote in the current issue of
the journal Foreign Affairs.
Russia has claimed 460,000 square miles (1.191 million sq km) of Arctic
waters, with an eye-catching effort that included planting its flag on the
ocean floor at the North Pole last summer. Days later, Moscow sent strategic
bomber flights over the Arctic for the first time since the Cold War.
"I think you can say planting a flag on the sea bottom and renewing
strategic bomber flights is provocative," Borgerson said in a telephone
interview.
SCRAMBLING AND SLEEPWALKING
By contrast, he said of the US position, "I don't think we're scrambling.
We're sleepwalking ... I think the Russians are scrambling and I think the
Norwegians and Canadians and Danes are keenly aware."
Borgerson said that now would be an appropriate time for the United States
to ratify the U.N. Convention on the Law of the Sea, which codifies which
countries have rights to what parts of the world's oceans.
The Bush administration agrees. So do many environmental groups, the US
military and energy companies looking to explore the Arctic, now that enough
ice is seasonally gone to open up sea lanes as soon as the next decade.
"There's no ice cold war," said one US government official familiar with the
Arctic Ocean rights issue. However, the official noted that joining the Law
of the Sea pact would give greater legal certainty to US claims in the area.
That is becoming more crucial, as measurements of the US continental shelf
get more precise.
Coastal nations like those that border the Arctic have sovereign rights over
natural resources of their continental shelves, generally recognized to
reach 200 nautical miles out from their coasts.
But in February, researchers from the University of New Hampshire and the US
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration released data suggesting
that the continental shelf north of Alaska extends more than 100 nautical
miles farther than previously presumed.
A commission set up by the Law of the Sea lets countries expand their sea
floor resource rights if they meet certain conditions and back them up with
scientific data.
The treaty also governs navigation rights, suddenly more important as
scientists last year reported the opening of the normally ice-choked waters
of the Northwest Passage from the Atlantic to the Pacific.
"Of course we need to be at the table as ocean law develops," the US
official said, speaking on condition of anonymity. "It's not like ocean law
is going to stop developing if we're not in there. It's just going to
develop without us."
(Editing by Philip Barbara)
Story by Deborah Zabarenko
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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