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Arctic Doom, Arctic Boom: The Geopolitics of Climate Change in the Arctic (Security and the Environment) PDF

246 Pages·2009·0.91 MB·English
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Arctic Doom, Arctic Boom This page intentionally left blank Arctic Doom, Arctic Boom The Geopolitics of Climate Change in the Arctic Barry Scott Zellen Foreword by Walter J. Hickel, Former Governor of Alaska Foreword by Daniel J. Moran Security and the Environment P. H. Liotta, Series Editor P RAEGER AnImprintofABC-CLIO,LLC Copyright(cid:2)C 2009byBarryScottZellen Allrightsreserved.Nopartofthispublicationmaybereproduced, storedinaretrievalsystem,ortransmitted,inanyformorbyany means,electronic,mechanical,photocopying,recording,orotherwise, exceptfortheinclusionofbriefquotationsinareview,withoutprior permissioninwritingfromthepublisher. LibraryofCongressCataloging-in-PublicationData Zellen,BarryScott,1963– Arcticdoom,Arcticboom:thegeopoliticsofclimatechangeinthe Arctic/BarryScottZellen;forewordbyWalterJ.Hickel[and]DanielJ.Moran. p.cm. Includesbibliographicalreferencesandindex. ISBN978-0-313-38012-9(hardcopy:alk.paper)—ISBN978-0-313-38013-6 (ebook)1.Climaticchanges—Arcticregions.2.Arcticregions—Climate. 3.Geopolitics—Arcticregions.I.Title. QC994.8.Z452009 551.651103—dc22 2009028076 13 12 11 10 9 1 2 3 4 5 ThisbookisalsoavailableontheWorldWideWebasaneBook. Visitwww.abc-clio.comfordetails. ABC-CLIO,LLC 130CremonaDrive,P.O.Box1911 SantaBarbara,California93116-1911 Thisbookisprintedonacid-freepaper ManufacturedintheUnitedStatesofAmerica CONTENTS ForewordbyWalterJ.Hickel vii ForewordbyDanielJ.Moran ix 1 Introduction:ArcticSpring 1 2 TheGeopoliticsofSnowandIce 7 3 AnArcticImperative? 45 4 FromColdWartoWarmingEarth 69 5 PolarUncertainties 103 6 TheEndoftheArctic 137 Notes 165 Bibliography 195 Index 225 This page intentionally left blank FOREWORD THE DAY OF THE ARCTIC IS UPON US To understand sustainable living in the Arctic, you have to have sustained thinking in the Arctic. You have to live it, over time. As Barry Zellen knows from his years in the Canadian north, those of us who live in the Arctic and sub-Arctic have a unique perspective that may surprise those from more temperate climes. The latter see the high latitudes as cold, remote, and as mysterious as the Moon. But to those of us who live here, the Arctic is home. The Arctic is heritage. The Arctic is our here and now, and our hereafter. As the world awakens to the realities of climate change, a typical reac- tion of policymakers “down South” is to fear the North and want to lock it up. But sustainable living requires more than preservation. It requires stew- ardship. The Arctic will never compete with the rest of the world for peo- ple, but the Arctic is rich with the resources people need. At Alaska’s North Slope, nature condensed a continent of food into an ocean of oil. Our history of development, with the exception of the Exxon Valdez disas- ter, has enjoyed the finest environmental record in the Arctic world. In the last thirty years, with state oversight, industry has shrunk the size of the drilling “footprint” to one quarter of its former size. No waste products are left on the surface. These innovations are extremely important to us who care about the future of the North. As the indigenous peoples learned long ago, in a cold, harsh environ- ment you have to care about others. You waste nothing. You share to sur- vive. You care for the total. Every hunter’s prize is a gift, not just to that hunter, but to one’s family and village. Throughout the world, the same sense of shared responsibility must now be awakened as we become sensi- tive to the needs of the global environment. Pollution knows no borders. All rivers eventually run into a common sea. All living things breathe the viii Foreword common air. In truth, it is a collective world, but one in which we live so privately. Without concern for other people, for their needs and wants, activities for strictly private gain become destructive, not only to others but eventually to oneself. That’s why in Alaska, we are as proud of our development accomplish- ments as we are of our environmental victories. Sustainable living requires both. And a large percentage of the resources of the future will come from the Arctic, the oceans, and space. In the case of the Arctic, instead of fearing to use our resources, we are determined to use them wisely. As we in the far North look at the world from the top, we observe that the ma- jority of the earth’s surface, including the oceans, is commons. It is com- monly owned, or owned by no one, therefore owned by all. By my tally, 84 percent of the earth’s surface is commons, and the commons is a great responsibility for this generation and a key to the future of the world. Because, if the human race learns to use the commons correctly, there will be no legitimate reason for poverty. The commons is obvious to us in Alaska, because nearly all of Alaska is commonly owned. As a result, our economic/political system is a hybrid combination of a constitutional democracy, a free enterprise economy, and public ownership of resources. Our “Owner State” goes beyond both social- ism and capitalism. We survive and subsist from the commons. We fund government from the commons. Economists and thinkers around the Arc- tic are fascinated by this model. The People’s Chamber, created by former Russian President Vladimir Putin, invited me to Moscow in 2006 to explain the Alaska approach. I believe it is well suited for Russia and all cultures with a tradition of community. Before Alaska became a state in 1959, the Alaska people were poor people living on rich land exploited by outside interests. But our statehood compact and our innovative constitu- tion require us to develop our natural resources “for the maximum benefit of our people.” This has worked well. To be able to benefit from the Alaska economic model, and the peace- ful relationships that Icelandic President O(cid:2)lafur Ragnar Gr(cid:2)imsson calls “The New North,” it is vital that policymakers worldwide take the time to understand the northern experience and welcome it. This book will help. Barry Zellen explores the complexity and the challenges facing the Arctic whilerecognizingtheexcitingrealitythattheDayoftheArcticisuponus. Walter J. Hickel Anchorage, Alaska Governor of Alaska, 1966–1969 and 1990–1994 U.S. Secretary of the Interior, 1969–1970 Founder, Institute of the North FOREWORD FROM ULTIMA THULE TO THE MIDNIGHT SEA I have a map of the Arctic on my wall that was drawn around 1700. It is, by and large, a work of pure fancy. It shows the “Arctic Circle,” a carto- graphic convention imported from astronomy that marks the southern- most point at which the earth receives 24 hours of sunlight in a single day—the so-called midnight sun. What lay beyond was anyone’s guess. On my map, the spirit of the Scientific Revolution has asserted itself, so that the artist (the only fair description) has omitted any representation of Ultima Thule, a dreamland that often appeared on medieval maps as a kind of place-holder to fill the space between knowledge and imagination. Instead the northern borders of the known world fade into the unknown, to nothing. The center of the page is occupied by an amorphous space called the Midnight Sea, into which some pleasant looking monsters have been inserted to add interest, as do a half-dozen sailing ships that, as the caption explains, are on their way from Europe to Asia. Try as they might, they would not get there. As everyone soon realized, the northernmost reaches of our planet’s surface were covered by an im- passable carapace of ice—a thrilling discovery to Victorian adventurers, who eagerly risked life and limb to reach the North Pole, but a discourag- ing prospect to nearly everyone else, for whom the Arctic remained scarcely more familiar than it was in the seventeenth century. Now the ice is melting and, with it, whatever inhibitions may have stood between man- kind and a more thorough acquaintance with what has long been one of the most socially and economically isolated regions on earth. My antique map is becoming more accurate every day. The Arctic is indeed an ocean, and if ships are ever able to sail across it unhindered it will mean that the world is on its way to becoming a much different place than it is now.

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A growing number of scientists estimate that there will be no summer ice in the Arctic by as soon as 2013. Are we approaching the "End of the Arctic?" as journalist Ed Struzik asked in 1992, or fully entering the "Age of the Arctic," as Arctic expert Oran Young predicted in 1986? Arctic Doom, Arctic
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