MOSCOW — Russia must defend its claims to mineral riches of the Arctic in increasing competition with other powers, President Dmitry Medvedev said today.
Medvedev said global climate change will likely fuel arguments between nations seeking access to energy and other resources.
“Other polar nations already have taken active steps to expand their scientific research as well as economic and even military presence in the Arctic,” he told a session of the presidential Security Council.
Medvedev added that attempts have been made to limit Russia’s access to Arctic resources, but he didn’t name a specific nation.
“Regrettably, we have seen attempts to limit Russia’s access to the exploration and development of the Arctic mineral resources,” he said. “That’s absolutely inadmissible from the legal viewpoint and unfair given our nation’s geographical location and history.”
Russia claims a large part of the Arctic seabed as its own, arguing that it is an extension of its continental shelf. In 2007, scientists staked a symbolic claim by dropping a canister containing the Russian flag onto the seabed from a small submarine.
The U.S., Canada, Denmark and Norway also have been trying to assert jurisdiction over parts of the Arctic, which is believed to contain as much as a quarter of the Earth’s undiscovered oil and gas.
The dispute has intensified amid growing evidence that global warming is shrinking polar ice, opening up new shipping lanes and new resource development opportunities.
In 2008, Medvedev signed an Arctic strategy paper saying that the polar region must become Russia’s “top strategic resource base” by the year 2020.
The document called for strengthening border guard forces in the region and updating their equipment, while creating a new group of military forces to “ensure military security under various military-political circumstances.”
It said that by 2011 Russia must complete geological studies to prove its claim to Arctic resources and win international recognition of its Arctic borders. Moscow first submitted its claim in 2001 to the United Nations, but was rejected for lack of evidence.
Talk to us
> Give us your news tips.
> Send us a letter to the editor.
> More Herald contact information.