The New Contestation

Cdr S Shrikumar(retd)

Willem Barentsz (anglicized as William Barents) (c.1550-1597) was a Dutch navigator, cartographer and Arctic explorer. William Barents made three voyages to the arctic in search of the Northeast Passage (more commonly known as the Northern Sea Route (NSR)). During the first two expeditions he reached as far as the Novaya Zemlya and the Kara Sea. The search for the Northern Sea Route was motivated by the desire to establish exclusive Dutch rights to a shorter trade route between Europe and the East.

During his third Arctic voyage, in 1596, he discovered the Spitsbergen archipelago. Barents died soon thereafter, during the return voyage, in 1597. This discovery sparked intense human activity on the then uninhabited archipelago. The fjords around the islands became the scene of heated international competition for sovereignty and for access to the rich whaling waters around the archipelago. This, in a sense, marked the beginning of the geopolitical manoeuvres in the Arctic that continue to this day.

Barents’s expeditions helped expand the world’s understanding of the Arctic. In 1853, the former Murmean Sea was renamed the Barents Sea in honour of William Barents. Barentsburg, the second largest settlement on Svalbard, the Barents Island and the Barents region are other places named in his honour. The first successful NSR voyage was completed only much later—towards end of the 1870s.

The Spitsbergen archipelago was termed the ‘terra nullius’—no man’s land. By the end of the nineteenth century, intense whaling activity led to the exhaustion of whale and walrus stocks around the islands. Soon, interest in the islands waned and they lay forgotten. Only a few Norwegian hunters continued to take minor advantage of the vast, distant and uninviting archipelago of ice.

This changed after the discovery of natural resources on the islands at the beginning of the twentieth century. Coal deposits discovered on the islands attracted investors and miners in such large numbers that, to resolve competing interests, establishing the rule of law became a pressing imperative.

The Spitsbergen Treaty of 1920, which granted sovereignty over the Spitsbergen archipelago (including the Bear Island) to Norway served to address this need for the rule of law. In 1925, Norway assumed sovereignty and changed the name of the archipelago to Svalbard—the original Norse name.

However, very soon, the high cost of transporting coal to the markets in Europe led to most of the coal mines being abandoned. Since the 1930s, Norway and Russia are the only nations maintaining a mining presence in the archipelago.

For Russia, its interest in mining coal in Svalbard served/ serves as a cover for maintaining vigil at the entrance to the Barents Sea and the gateway to the Kola Peninsula where Russia’s Northern Fleet is based.


                                                  Vladimir Putin was sworn in for a new six-year term at a Kremlin ceremony that was boycotted by the United States                                                               and many other Western countries due to #Russia’s war in Ukraine

Geopolitical Contestations

Ever since a significant melting and contraction of the summer ice cover over the Arctic Ocean became observable, the Arctic region has been an area of geopolitical contestation and conflict. The contestations are over offshore hydrocarbon/mineral resources, disputed continental shelf rights and the control of prized sea lanes—the Northern Sea route and the Northwest Passage (NWP). In 2007, the dispute over continental shelf rights flared up when Russia, using a deep-sea submersible, dropped a titanium casket containing a Russian flag on the Arctic seabed at a depth of 4,200 metres below the North Pole.

Today, the Arctic is a region of much geopolitical uncertainty. The search for a sea route through the Arctic has been a long-cherished quest for mariners looking for a shorter sea route between the markets in the west and the east. However, the impenetrable ice which covered the Arctic Ocean for much of the year had put paid, over centuries, to all efforts to find a sea route through the Arctic.

The Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen, in 1906, became the first to successfully transit the NWP. It took Amundsen three years to complete the journey, relying heavily upon the Canadian Inuit to survive during the winters. The first ship to transit the NWP, in a single season (in 1942), was the Canadian ship St. Roch, captained by Henry Larsen.

Besides the Northwest Passage, the search for a Northeast Passage/ Northern Sea Route to connect the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans commenced as early as 1525. Tsar Peter the Great, of Russia, commissioned several expeditions through the region. By the seventeenth century, a continuous sea route from Arkhangelsk in the Russian north to the mouth of the Yenisei River in the Kara Sea had been opened for trade and transit. The first voyage across the entire NSR was accomplished by Swedish explorer Baron Adolf in 1879. Later, Roald Amundsen became the first explorer to circumnavigate the Arctic Ocean when he completed a transit of the Northeast Passage in 1920.

Global warming and the consequent shrinking of ice cover, over the last few decades, has made the Arctic more accessible, prompting nations to reexamine their arctic strategies. The Arctic, as a shipping route, holds immense potential. The shipping route from East Asia to Northern Europe, via the Suez Canal, is about 11,200 nautical miles. Through the NSR, it is about 6500 nautical miles, and the shortened distance reduces travel time on a Kobe to Rotterdam voyage by 12–15 days.

Not surprisingly, it is not only the Arctic states that recognise the strategic importance of the region. China’s Arctic White Paper of 2018 recognised the potential of the Arctic and described it as a ‘Polar Silk Route’ that could be a part of China’s global Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). Clearly, given the Arctic’s geostrategic location and the increasing accessibility of its waters, the region is poised to gain salience for trade, offshore mineral/ hydrocarbon resource utilisation, fishing, tourism and military activity.

Militarisation of the Arctic

Arctic strategists have long described the Arctic, rather tritely, as being ‘high in the north but low on tension.’ However, the renewed geostrategic interest and increasing military activity in the region are giving rise to concerns. Russia has a well-thought-out Arctic policy in place, as evidenced by its reopening of several Soviet era bases and deployment of newer, more capable military assets to the region. The establishment of the Russian Arctic Command, in 2014, has led to the setting up of new bases to house Russian forces. Also, the Russi

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