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HomeAlaska IssuesDiscover the Top 3 and Bottom 3 Arctic Stories of Last Year

Discover the Top 3 and Bottom 3 Arctic Stories of Last Year

What were the three most important Arctic stories of 2014?

1) Pobeda oil fields: That oil field was the one discoverd by ExxonMobil and Rosneft in September off the Russian coast. For the first time oil could be struck offshore in the Kara Sea. It was a Russian-American joint venture. Given what’s happening now between the West and Russia, this discovery  will be key for the geopolitics of oil in the Arctic.

Discover the Top 3 and Bottom 3 Arctic Stories of Last Year

2) Greenland’s snap election: There was a misuse of public funds by former Greenlandic Prime Minister Aleqa Hammond. That led to her fall and a snap election on Nov. 28. If you talked to Greenlandic media or Greenlandic analysts, they predicted two or three weeks before the election who would win. If you talked to Danish specialists, most of them didn’t foresee the result. What I’m trying to emphasize here is that there’s a broadening gap between Greenland and Denmark, although they’re still part of the Danish realm.

3) #Sealfie Movement: The #HuntSealEatSealWearSeal hashtag  was a big thing in the first part of 2014. For once, people from the South could understand at a broad level what’s actually happening in the North and could hear the voices of the people in the North. So the #sealfie movement was one of the key things in the North American Arctic for 2014 and one of the most importation cultural features this year.

What was the most overlooked northern story or issue of 2014?

1) Poor Northern Sea Route season: Compared to last year when there were 71 cargo ship transits, the numbers fell down to 23. The cargo tonnage decreased 75 percent compared to last year. I’m not saying this decrease was triggered by geopolitics or by sanctions against Russia; there was just too much ice on the Northern Sea Route. This was poorly reported in the international media and even some Arctic media.

2) The Arctic Economic Council: This is a feature of the Canadian Arctic Council chairmanship but not a lot of people talked about it. It’s one of the first pan-Arctic forums for economic affairs. But beyond the Arctic community it didn’t get much traction.

3) Arctic Biodiversity Assessment: It’s a publication by the Conservation of Arctic Flora and Fauna, a working group of the Arctic Council. They’ve done a seven-year report to assess Arctic biodiversity. It’s more than 600 pages and nobody talked about it. Actually, it’s some of the best work the Arctic Council has produced so far.

See Full Story at ADN.com

image credit wikipedia.com

Discover the Top 3 and Bottom 3 Arctic Stories of Last Year

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