The New Treaty and Arctic Gamesmanship

Global warming is turning the Arctic into a geopolitical hot spot, intensifying competition for valuable resources like oil and gas.

Written byKeith Kloor
| 1 min read
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Last month, I wrote this post, laying out the

global warming = Arctic geopolitical hot spot narrative.

So it's not exactly news to me that the latest batch of cables released by Wikileaks show, as the BBC reported, that

nations are racing to "carve up" Arctic resources - oil, gas and even rubies - as the ice retreats.

Although these cables are a few years old, they serve as the unfiltered backstory to this big Arctic Council meeting last week, to

discuss cooperation over increased oil and mineral exploration, fishing and tourism as global warming melts the region's ice.

Interestingly, the cables don't seem to have been leaked until the meeting concluded and a new Arctic treaty was inked:

Canada, Russia, the United States and their smaller circumpolar neighbours have agreed how to divvy up the fast-warming and fragile Arctic, but only for search-and-rescue responsibilities, leaving aside the vexed issues of sovereignty, oil drilling, pollution and shipping.

Other stories highlighted the cooperative outlines of the pact, but once those diplomatic cables circulated in the media, the headlines shifted back to the conflict theme:

Warming Arctic Opens Way to Competition for Resources

For additional background on the issues at play, see this book review I wrote last year.

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