USA EEZ & CONTINENTAL SHELF RUSSIA EEZ & CONTINENTAL SHELF CANADA EEZ & CONTINENTAL SHELF GREENLAND (DENMARK) EEZ & CONTINENTAL SHELF

Similar documents
CANADA AND THE NORTH INSUFFICIENT SECURITY RESOURCES THEN AND NOW

The Arctic Is Ours : Canada s Arctic Policy - Between Sovereignty and Climate Change Petra Dolata-Kreutzkamp i

Statoil s Arctic program, Bear Island nature reserve and the ice edge May 12, 2014

Redefined Northern Security a challenge to Arctic geopolitics?

Arctic Circle Assembly The future of Greenland: A dialogue. Speech by Minister for Industry, Labour, Trade and Foreign Affairs, Mr. Vittus Qujaukitsoq

Protecting the environment of the Arctic ecosystem. By Professor Olav Orheim Norwegian Polar Institute

ARCTIC SANCTUARY GLOBAL COMMONS, ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION & FUTURE-PROOFING

Safety Challenges in the Arctic

BMP Guidelines. Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) report for activities related to hydrocarbon exploration and exploitation offshore Greenland

The Norwegian ecosystem-based management plan for the Barents Sea and sea areas off the Lofoten Islands. The Barents Sea

COUNTRY NOTE ON NATIONAL FISHERIES MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS -- GERMANY

S cu cu i r t i y t Co C u o n u c n il

Aleutians East Borough's North Aleutian Basin Lease Sale 214 EIS Summary of Resident Concerns (February 17, 2009)

Therefore, this is a very important question, which encourages consideration of the current management of the resource.

Arctic Fibre Submarine Cable System

Offshore development benefits.

7.1 How and why are some eco-systems threatened with destruction?

The One Ocean Model: Fishing and Petroleum Industries in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada

3.3.3 Capelin (Mallotus villosus) in Subareas I and II (Northeast Arctic), excluding Division IIa west of 5 W (Barents Sea capelin)

From WorldWide to Arctic, challenges and risk

Nordic-Baltic-American Cooperation in the Arctic: A United States View

narrated by sylvia earle/oceans overview 71% is covered by the Earth's Ocean

Energy Outlook: U.S. Arctic Outer Continental Shelf

WORLD REGIONAL GEOGRAPHY. By Brett Lucas

The Fram Centre Research in the high north under innovative structure

Maritime Domain Awareness: Mapping, Tracking, and Visualization

Appropriation: Pacific Coastal Salmon Recovery Fund

Fisheries Management: Arctic principles

Chapter 5. Other Accounts 5-1

LOFOTEN, BEAR ISLAND & SVALBARD. 4 th - 13 th May 2016 with M/S Quest

An Approach To Oil Spill Containment For Floating Drilling Operations In Canadian Beaufort Sea Pack Ice Conditions

German High Seas Fishermen and Sustainable Fish Stocks

The Emergence of China as a Polar-Capable State

Henry Hudson by Kelly Hashway

6 April Dear Ms. Harrison:

SAON CANADA SCIENCE - POLICY BRIEFS

Risk Governance for the Arctic. Dr. Reto Schneider Swiss Re

RESEARCH-BASED SOLUTIONS TO ARCTIC CHALLENGES

INTERNATIONAL SCIENTIFIC AND EDUCATIONAL CENTER «ARCTIC»

Project Title: Fishing Technology and Conservation Engineering to Reduce Bycatch Contact: Carwyn F. Hammond and Scott McEntire

Declaration on the 20th Anniversary of the Barents Euro-Arctic Cooperation. (Kirkenes, Norway, 3 4 June 2013)

Maritime Doctrine of Russian Federation 2020

AGREEMENT. on Cooperation on Marine Oil Pollution Preparedness and Response in the Arctic

PORT ERIN CABLE REEF PROPOSAL

MEOPAR and Horizon 2020 Neil Gall November 18, 2014

The Arctic: Past the Last Frontier. Christopher Kulander 1 and Sergei Lomako 2. Introduction

AMAP State of Art and Experiences related to Arctic marine risk

Conference; Cold Climate Technology (ICCCT) in Narvik, May 2014 «Regional specific challenges in the Barents Sea»

Knut Bjørn Lindkvist, Department of Geography, University of Bergen

Environmental Considerations of Oil & Gas Exploration & Production on Alaska s s North Slope. Presented by: Caryn Rea Sr.

The Gulf of Maine Ocean Observing System

PRESS KIT PL 553 KVITVOLA. Exploration well 34/7 36 S

Skjal 2. The Faroe Plateau Ecosystem. ICES 2016

INTERNATIONAL OBLIGATIONS AND AGREEMENTS

Alaska Regional Coastal and Ocean Observing System 2012 NOPP REPORT

Right Whale. The Kids Times: Volume II, Issue 6. NOAA s National Marine Fisheries Service, Office of Protected Resources

AN ARCTIC RACE: HOW THE UNITED STATES FAILURE TO RATIFY THE LAW OF THE SEA CONVENTION COULD ADVERSELY AFFECT ITS INTERESTS IN THE ARCTIC

International and national regulation of operational and accidental cruise ships pollution of the marine environment in the Arctic

Arctic Oil and Gas Development

THE FISHERIES REQUIREMENTS FOR AREA IN RELATION TO SEISMIC ACTIVITIES THE FISHERIES

Expert Network Monitoring Plan. RANGIFERS Supporting Publication to the Circumpolar Biodiversity Monitoring Program Framework Document

POLAR ICE Integrated Arctic and Antarctic Sea Ice monitoring Services

The geopolitics of Arctic melt

CHAPTER 4 Mandatory & Discretionary Funds

Norway s Impact on the Canadian Economy

Is fibre optic new or existing telecommunications technology? I ve heard its pie in the sky and can t be done.

A Web-based Geospatial Analysis Tool for BREA: Integrating Research into an Assessment. Valerie Torontow and Jason Duffe Environment Canada Ottawa, ON

Aquaculture and fisheries 2003

Captain J. Ashley Roach, JAGC, USN (retired) Office of the Legal Adviser, U.S. Department of State (retired) Global Associate, CIL NUS Singapore

Arktis ett svenskt tillväxtområde

Japan s Arctic Policies with regards to Maritime Law and Jurisdictional Issues

Act on Fishing Outside of Icelandic Jurisdiction

Arctic for the Future. Sergei Tambiev. Action for the Protection of the Arctic Marine Environment

Marine Accidents SØULYKKESRAPPORT FRA OPKLARINGSENHEDEN

Shrimp and Turbot From a Marketing Perspective

./01&2/M./T34 1MP36T ST3T.M./T. 1a$t3l$4 536e-al4 13$ %3te9. Sol9ara 1 Pro;ect. !"l$%e ( Mai$ &e(ort. Te-t. )e*te%,e- 2//0 :; <//0=>=?

Proactive Emergency Preparedness in the Barents Sea

AP ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE 2010 SCORING GUIDELINES

The Importance of the United Nations Law of the Sea Convention to the Cable Industry By Douglas R. Burnett 1

Maritime Human Resources Solutions Seminar. Robert Cadigan President & CEO Newfoundland & Labrador Oil & Gas Industries Association

The oil fields in the NCS are located in the North Sea, Norwegian Sea, and Barents Sea.

This page intentionally left blank

Changes in the Arctic: Background and Issues for Congress

Review of Co-management Efforts in Alaska

Hull & Machinery insurance when sailing in ice. The Nordic Marine Insurance Plan of 2013 (NMIP) Robert H.Hansen Jens W. Bern. (and remote areas)

The HNS Compensation Regime. Regional workshop on the 2010 HNS Convention Rome, Italy 10 October 2014 Jose Maura Director

THE NORWEGIAN GOVERNMENT S HIGH NORTH STRATEGY

HEARING ON MAGNUSON-STEVENS FISHERY CONSERVATION AND MANAGEMENT ACT

The Facts About Right Whales

Marine Protected Areas POLICY

Where Will the Polar Bears Go?

Would You Like a Sample?

Russian Roulette. International Oil Company Risk in the Russian Arctic

Barents Escape, Evacuation and Rescue of People (EER) Morten Mejlænder-Larsen Bodø 21. November 2012

The High North as a New Area of Cooperation and Rivalry

Resolving the South China Sea dispute

NIAGARA INTERNATIONAL MOOT COURT COMPETITION. A Dispute Arising Under the Statute of the International Court of Justice.

b Gear selectivity in the directed cod fishery (BACOMA project)

How To Find Natural Oil Seepage In The Dreki Area Using An Envisat Image

NORWAY 1. THE CONTEXT... Part I POLLUTION CONTROL AND MANAGEMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES

Transcription:

WHO OWNS THE ARCTIC

USA EEZ & CONTINENTAL SHELF RUSSIA EEZ & CONTINENTAL SHELF CANADA EEZ & CONTINENTAL SHELF GREENLAND (DENMARK) EEZ & CONTINENTAL SHELF NORWAY EEZ & CONTINENTAL SHELF ICELAND EEZ & CONTINENTAL SHELF CASING THE ARCTIC MAP OVERLAYING MINERAL SPECULATION SHIPPING ROUTES BELUGA RANGE KING CRAB RANGE SOVEREIGNTY

INTRODUCTION The Arctic is home to the world s largest untapped gas reserves, 13% of the worlds remaining oil, and vast mineral deposits. These commodities, compounded by the effects of climate change, have exposed the Arctic to corporate profiteering and the potential for geopolitical tension caused by unresolved sovereignty claims. Through a systematic examination of the weaknesses of systems, conspiracy can be viewed as a form of critique - a deceitful narration of legitimate practices. My project proposes three illicit, fictional money making schemes specifically designed for the unique environmental and political composition of the region. These schemes enable local communities to compete in the financial environment of the arctic by viewing conflict and greed as another of the regions resources. They encourage the manipulation of mineral speculation, and systems of insurance and finance to support local communities through immoral behaviour. The plans for these schemes are deliberately imperfect, simplistic, and crude, but serve to hint at the complex, and increasingly taught relationship between the environment, ecology, politics, and business of the Arctic. Each location has been specifically chosen due to it s potential for illicit opportunities.

BELUGA AUTOPSY MINERAL RUSH ROUTE RUSSIA

ORIGINAL SIGNATORY COUNTRIES WHEN THE SVALBARD TREATY CAME INTO EFFECT IN 1925. THE MINERAL RUSH The mineral rush is initiated through the poisoning of beluga whales. The Beluga are a sentinel species - their health is studied as indicative of the state arctic environment as a whole. The Belugas are poisoned with lithium by fishermen working in the Barents Sea, south west of Svalbard. The lithium is procured from anti depressant tablets, placed into dissolvable bags, loaded into fish and tossed over board to the whales. A dose of 500g of lithium is fatal for an animal the size of a Beluga. The lithium poisoning would take a few days to take effect, causing seizures, organ failure, and eventually death. The Norwegian Atlantic current will wash the Belugas onto the south west coast of Spitsbergen, where an autopsy would be inevitable. This process is repeated several times, providing authorities on the island with evidence that a lucrative mineral deposit potentially exists in the waters around the archipelago. Under the terms of the Svalbard treaty, the signatory countries retain the right to conduct commercial activities on the archipelago and would have a vested interest if minerals were found on Svalbard. Income could be generated legitimately through the sale of infrastructure, or illegally through insider trading on the stock of mineral exploration companies.

HELMHOLTZ RESONATOR 182 CM AUTODIALER ICEBERG RESONATOR DEVICE

ICEBERG ROUTE GREENLAND CANADA MINERAL WEALTH THE OIL SPILL Between Canada and Greenland is Baffin Bay, where Icebergs calved from Greenland s Petermann glacier start their journey into the north Atlantic. Along this journey the icebergs float past the infrastructure needed to find the oil and gas reserves beneath the seabed of Baffin Bay, and the Labrador sea. Icebergs are found and tracked by the Coastguard using Radar. The larger bergs are easily detected, but as they break into smaller pieces they are far harder, if not impossible for radar to find. These smaller pieces, still the size of a ship, are more than capable of damaging infrastructure or causing an oil spill. To increase the number of these smaller bergs a special tool has been developed that uses resonance frequency to break the ice. A number of these devices would need to be attached to the top of the bergs along existing fracture lines created during the calving process. The devices use an autodialer, similar to safe cracking equipment, to cycle through frequencies, until the frequency of the ice is found. This frequency is emitted into the ice through a resonator and the iceberg shakes it self apart. These pieces are intended to evade the coastguard s radar and damage heavy infrastructure, or cause spills. Money is made through the purchase of put options in the insurance companies or energy companies potentially affected by the spill.

SPECIALISED CRAB POT 365 CM

RUSSIA ALASKA KING CRAB RANGE THE FISHING DISPUTE In the crab fishing off-season, 15 crabbing vessels sail from Russia into the crab fisheries in the Bering sea with the aim of kidnapping 21 tonnes of king crab (worth $105,000,000). Using special crab pots, the vessels drag their bounty for three days, relocating them in the a section of the Beaufort sea where sovereignty (and fishing rights) is still contested by America and Canada. A press leak is then sent to newspapers in Barrow Alaska and Toktoyaktuk Harbor, Canada describing the whereabouts of the valuable crabs. The resulting scramble for these valuable crabs has the potential to initiate a confrontation between the American and Canadian fishing fleets, similar to the Cod Wars between Britain and Iceland. Money could be made through buying put options in crabbing companies.