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Melting Arctic Ocean Opens A New Shipping Frontier
BARROW, AK (AP) - Rapidly melting ice on Alaska’s Arctic is opening up
a new navigable ocean in the extreme north, allowing oil tankers, fishing vessels
and even cruise ships to venture into a realm once trolled mostly by indigenous
hunters.
The Coast Guard expects so much traffic that it opened two temporary stations
on the nation’s northernmost waters, anticipating the day when an ocean
the size of the contiguous United States could be ice-free for most of the
summer.
“
We have to prepare for the world coming to the Arctic,” said Rear Admiral
Gene Brooks, commander of the Coast Guard’s Alaska district.
Scientists say global warming has melted the polar sea ice each summer to
half the size it was in the 1960s, opening vast stretches of water. Last year,
it
thawed to its lowest level on record.
The rapid melting has raised speculation that Canada’s Northwest Passage
linking the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans could one day become a regular shipping
lane. And there is a huge potential for natural resources in a region that may
contain as much as 25 percent of the world’s undiscovered oil and gas.
But scientists caution that it could be centuries before the Arctic is completely
ice-free all year round.
Still, conservative estimates indicate the Arctic Ocean will be ice-free
in the summer within 20 years, although some scientists believe that will occur
much
sooner.
As it thaws, the receding ice has made ocean travel along Alaska’s
northern coast increasingly alluring, but ships can still be trapped by ice.
Earlier in August, three oil industry vessels bound for Canada became stuck
in ice about 60 miles north of Point Barrow. The Coast Guard sent the icebreaker
Healy to help, but before it could arrive from 300 miles away, the wind shifted
and pushed the ice apart, freeing the vessels.
“
They were able to get away,” Brooks said. “The problem with this
ice is it’s very unpredictable.”
Because of such risks, the Coast Guard established temporary bases in Barrow,
the country’s highest-latitude town, and at the North Slope’s Prudhoe
Bay, the nation’s largest oil field. The bases will operate for a few weeks
while Guard officials evaluate the need for the agency’s services.
The Northwest Passageway is also increasingly popular with tourists.
Chuck Cross has been leading excursions to the North Pole with his Bend,
Oregon-based Polar Cruises since 1991, and he’s noticed a big change over the years.
“
It’s amazing to me when I go to the pole how thin the ice is, huge open
spots of water in some areas,” he said. “Before, you spent more time
getting there and more time in the ice. We’d have helicopters looking
for breaks in the water for us.”
The thaw has added urgency to the race among neighboring nations to claim
a piece of the North Pole’s resources. The U.S. is compiling mapping
data that could bolster any claims for drilling rights.
Many countries have launched scientific expeditions, hoping to take advantage
of a provision in international law that allows nations to claim rights over
their continental shelf beyond the normal boundary of 200 nautical miles, if
the claim can be supported with geologic evidence.
The Coast Guard is concerned that the increasing volume of ship traffic brings
greater potential for oil spills, lost boaters and other mishaps.
“
We have to ask ourselves whether we’re prepared for these ships coming
to our shores,” said Mead Treadwell, who chairs the U.S. Arctic Research
Commission. He testified in Congress about the need to build new Coast Guard
icebreakers to better protect traffic in its Arctic waterways.
Before the Coast Guard opened its base in Barrow, the nearest station where
ships could stop for fuel and provisions was Alaska’s Kodiak Island,
almost 1,000 miles away.
Richard Glenn, an official with Arctic Slope Regional Corp., a Barrow-based
company that represents the business interests of Alaska Natives, said the
Coast Guard’s
arrival in his community is “like bread to starving people.”
“
When everything goes wrong - all-time storms, tragic loss of vessels, lost people
on land - there’s nothing that’s ever been so far away than the
Coast Guard.”
The town of 4,000 people has welcomed the agency and even supplied hangars
for two helicopters.
But the warming climate has also disrupted an ancient way of life for many
in the region, particularly hunters who use the floating ice as platforms for
hunting
marine mammals like bowhead whales and walrus. The same ice is vital to the
survival of polar bears, which are the first species declared as threatened
because of
climate change.
Snow also thaws much earlier each spring than in the past, meaning hunters
can’t
travel as far along the tundra after it turns soggy. And the late arrival of
fall affects weather patterns, creating dangerous sea currents and strong winds.
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