Arctic Watch

Facts About the Arctic

Participants at their seats to attend the 11th Ministerial Meeting of the Arctic Council in Rovaniemi, Finland on May 7, 2019.
Cooperation

The Rise and Sudden Fall of the Arctic Council

0 0
Read Time:4 Minute, 20 Second

On May 11, 2023, in a much-anticipated ceremony, leaders from eight Arctic states and six Indigenous organizations assembled behind closed doors to witness a transfer of power. At first blush, it was routine Arctic Council business: this forum promoting northern cooperation rotates chairmanship every two years. But this had been no ordinary year, with no ordinary chair. The council—suspended since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine last year—resurrected only to witness Russia hand the chairmanship to its Norwegian successor. And a peaceful transfer was far from a foregone conclusion.

“It was an extremely straightforward meeting, which we see as a success,” said Morten Hoglund, senior Arctic official for Norway, in a virtual press briefing from Tromso directly following the meeting. “If someone had an interest in it not going as planned, they could have easily derailed it.”

That “someone,” of course, would have been Russia. Since the Arctic Council’s unilateral refusal to cooperate with its largest geographical member last March, Russia has shown no sign of de-escalating its aggression against Ukraine. And the council’s 130-odd circumpolar projects—tackling issues from science, to shipping, to Indigenous youth suicide—have paid the price. For more than a year, this symbol of High North peace has fractured along territorial lines, awaiting a return to a status quo that seems increasingly impossible.

Today, with a NATO state back at its helm, the Arctic Council will officially resume its work. But it’s still unwilling to include Russia, raising practical questions about what this forum can actually achieve without its largest geographical stakeholder. Russia makes up 45 percent of the geographical Arctic; shipping routes depend on its waters, and climate research depends on its data. Norway is now facing hard questions about the relevance of a “circumpolar” forum that ignores half of the High North.

“Technically speaking, there’s no ‘Arctic Council’ without Russia,” said Svein Vigeland Rottem, senior research fellow at the Norwegian Fridtjof Nansen Institute and author of the 2020 book The Arctic Council: Between Environmental Protection and Geopolitics. “So one could ask: What, exactly, is this group now?”

The Arctic Council, founded in 1996 in a post-Cold War vision of High North peace, has no real global equivalent. Along with representatives from eight foreign ministries, it’s the only international group that includes Indigenous leaders as equal stakeholders. (The council’s 13 observer states, made up of interested non-Arctic nations, attend but do not participate in meetings.) And, because its work is voluntary and not treaty-based, these leaders have flexibility to independently approve or invest in its projects.

“It’s a completely unique group formed around a specific set of challenges,” said Lars-Otto Reiersen, who served as executive secretary of the council’s Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Program (AMAP) for 25 years. “Most leaders of Arctic states don’t reside there. And most problems in the north can’t be solved there, either.”

Pollution was the first such problem to raise global attention. In 1991, Finland launched AMAP, then a postwar project to monitor contamination throughout the far north. The findings were startling: The blood of Arctic species and peoples contained the planet’s highest concentration of persistent organic chemicals—the vast majority of which came from industry farther south. The cold Northern regions acted as a “sink” for these global pollutants, they found, and toxic chemicals were building up, or bioaccumulating, in the blood of polar species foundational to Indigenous diets. AMAP recognized a twofold challenge: to both establish a dialogue on the ground with Arctic communities, and at the highest levels to influence international law. Over the next decade, its data, coupled with policy recommendations, helped build the legally binding 2001 Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants.

“It was a success story of combining data you can’t question with real actions for policymakers to take,” Reiersen said. “And it was an early model of close collaboration between scientists and Indigenous people.”

In 1996, the Arctic Council formed in the spirit of this work: to protect the environment and peoples of the north. Since, its six expert-led working groups—including monitoring, clean-up, conservation, oceans, peoples, search and rescue, and sustainable development—have worked in the background to influence international law. Data published in its 2009 Arctic Marine Shipping Assessment directly informed the International Maritime Organization’s regulatory Polar Code. An AMAP report on mercury contamination fueled the 2013 Minamata Convention regulating mercury. Since 2005, AMAP—now a network of more than 700 experts—has also contributed the entire Arctic section of the annual Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report.

In March 2022, however, this vast network of science, policy, and diplomacy came to a screeching halt. For some projects, the pause was brief: By June, some projects without direct Russian involvement quietly resumed their work. The Indigenous Peoples’ Secretariat, which supports the six Indigenous organizations independently of the council, also continued to operate. But for climate science and environmental monitoring projects—which rely on consistent data collection across borders—it was a massive blow.

Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %

Average Rating

5 Star
0%
4 Star
0%
3 Star
0%
2 Star
0%
1 Star
0%

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *