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U.N. to Mediate Arctic Dispute: "Carve-Up" Deal in the Works?

by Jeremy Elton Jacquot, Los Angeles on 05.31.08
Business & Politics

greenland
Image courtesy of Stig Nygaard via flickr

A flashpoint of international contention in recent months, the race to lay claim to the Arctic's resources finally came to a head this past week when Greenland hosted a meeting between the five Arctic nations to resolve the dispute, The Guardian's Julian Borger reports. Lambasted as a "carve-up"deal by critics for barring several nations and environmental groups from participating, the U.S., Norway, Russia, Denmark and Canada agreed to abide by the 1982 Law of the Sea in managing the region's vast oil and gas reserves.

Until now, the dispute over who could rightly claim the Arctic's resources had boiled down to an arcane debate over which of the five nations' continental shelves were connected to the region's undersea mountain ranges. Under the Law of the Sea, countries can only own the seabed beyond their Exclusive Economic Zones (200 nautical miles out) if it's part of their continental shelf.

Adjudicating the dispute may prove difficult for the U.N. as each country has (not surprisingly) interpreted the law to favor its interests and shown little sign of backing down. Another problem is that the U.S., despite taking part in the discussions, never actually ratified the 1982 U.N. convention -- leaving many to wonder why it should benefit from any future resource "carve-up."

Environmental groups are pushing the idea that the Arctic should be protected in the same way as the Antarctic from any military activity or drilling. With some estimating that the Arctic could contain a quarter of the world's remaining undiscovered oil and gas reserves, we doubt this proposition will carry much weight.

Via ::The Guardian: Closed-door Arctic deal denounced as 'carve-up' (news website)

See also: ::Arctic Could Contain 400 Billion Barrels of Oil, ::Seeking Oil, Russia Claims North Pole

Comments (3)

Tragic news for the Arctic... tragic news for the globe...
I guess it's unstoppable now - we all love our cars more than the planet we live on.
It's going to be tough to justify to future generations.

jump to top weee says:

wow.so is it really worth it. do u really value your truck more than you value the earth? this is just selfishness on the part of all of us.

jump to top nathaniel says:

utter madness.

heard some guy on the radio talking about norway's involvement with russia and both wanting to talk this one out.

russia has already made a mock clain to the north, by placing a metal flag at the base (their claim is that is part of the russian land shelf).

soon will we be at war?

or will this be carved up, with the stronger nations getting their way?

don't think it will be protected, even though it is a part of no-man's land and should be protected by 'rights of the seas'....

will watch developments with interest!

jump to top cas says:

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