A service of the Arctic Task Force of the IUCN Commission on Environmental Law (IUCN-CEL)

Freitag, 29. Juli 2011

USA: Subcommittee Hearing on Economic Interests

The US Senate Oceans, Atmosphere, Fisheries, and Coast Guard Subcommittee held a hearing on 26 July under the title: "defending U.S. economic interests in the changing arctic." The hearing was intended to examine how the United States can better position itself to take advantage of emerging economic opportunities in the Arctic region and assess whether federal agencies are proactively positioning themselves to promote US Arctic interests, and whether they have adequate capacity to meet their goals in the Arctic.  

Witnesses included:
Panel 1
• Admiral Robert J. Papp Jr., Commandant, United States Coast Guard
• Rear Admiral David W. Titley, Oceanographer and Navigator of the Navy, United States Navy
• Ambassador David A. Balton, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Oceans and Fisheries, Bureau of Oceans and International Environmental and Scientific Affairs, U.S. Department of State

Panel 2
• Mr. Peter Slaiby, Vice President, Alaska Venture, Shell Oil Company
• Dr. Scott Borgerson, Senior Fellow, Institute for Global Marine Studies
• Dr. Andrew Metzger, Assistant Professor, University of Alaska-Fairbanks

Archived webcast and written testimony


Freitag, 22. Juli 2011

View on US Arctic Development

Thanks again to the Ocean Law Daily, we have been informed of a recent op-ed titled: "Time to Take Alaska Out of the Icebox: The Arctic has immense energy and mineral resources. Why are we letting Russia beat us to them?" in the Wall Street Journal. Therein, Scott Borgerson, former Ocean Governance Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, and Scott Minerd, CEO and Chief Investment Officer at Guggenheim Partners provide their views and recommendations for a strengthened US policy for the Arctic.

Freitag, 15. Juli 2011

Russian Federation: Recent Comments by Minister of Foreign Affairs

Thanks to the Ocean Law Daily, we were informed of an interview conducted by The Voice of Russia, an AM radio station in the United States, with Sergei Lavrov, Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation. Here follows the excerpted transcript:
(Interviewer) You know, it`s been mentioned that Moscow will submit a claim next year to the UN to expand its Arctic shelf borders. Other nations including the US have also increased their activities in the region, and it is described by some analysts as a new re-division of the Arctic. How do you see the role of Russia in this process and does it need to increase its military presence there as the US and Canada do?   May the future of the Arctic be resolved peacefully?
(Lavrov) Well, first of there is no such thing as redesigning of the Arctic landscape and redesigning the legal regime of the Arctic. The five coastal states, the Arctic Five so to say, back in 2008 agreed during their meeting that there is no single problem in the region that cannot be resolved on the basis of existing law, this law being the international Convention of 1982.
Then this position was endorsed by the entire Arctic Council which is composed by eight Arctic states and you now the fact that this is really the case was demonstrated by the signature and entry into force of the Russian-Norwegian agreement on de-limitation in the Barents Sea area.
There is no single issue in the area that would require any military presence of the non-regional actors, be it countries or organizations. The Arctic Five, Russia, the US, Canada, Norway and Denmark are perfectly capable of maintaining the necessary level of security, the freedom of shipping and safety of the shipping and we are open to other countries who want to cooperate but on the basis of the rules of the game established by the Arctic countries.
We met last May in Greenland, in the city of Nuuk, as the Arctic Council ministerial meeting and we adopted the first pan-Arctic legally binding agreement on search and rescue and instructed our experts to draft a Treaty on how you fight oil spills. We also endorsed the rules for observers who want to participate in the work of the Arctic Council which provide for them to be parties to projects like exploration of oil and gas, transportation of oil, gas and other commodities through the Northern Sea route, participation in scientific research and many other activities.
But I would like to emphasize once again that there’s no problem requiring any military involvement in the Arctic. Everything must be and should be on the basis of the international convention of the law of the sea and it’s a common position of the members of the Arctic Council, including Russia and the US.