Times Colonist

Bering Strait shipping routes receive approval

- DAN JOLING

ANCHORAGE, Alaska — An internatio­nal agency that sets standards for marine safety has approved two-way shipping routes into the Arctic Ocean through the Bering Strait.

The Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on, an arm of the United Nations, accepted routes proposed by the United States and Russia for safe navigation in the water between Alaska and Russia’s Chukotskiy Peninsula.

The action designated routes for northbound and southbound traffic on both sides of the Diomede Islands within the Bering Strait, a chokepoint about 80 kilometres wide between the northern Bering Sea and the Chukchi Sea. Six areas of precaution are noted.

The maritime organizati­on also designated three areas to be avoided around Alaska’s Nunivak, King and St. Lawrence islands.

“This is a big step forward as the U.S. Coast Guard continues to work together with internatio­nal, interagenc­y and maritime stakeholde­rs to make our waterways safer, more efficient and more resilient,” Mike Sollosi, chief of the agency’s Navigation Standards Division, said in a statement.

The routes take effect Dec. 1. Their use is voluntary, but they ensure mariners that they can transit in deep water without natural obstructio­ns.

The Coast Guard spent nearly a decade working on safety measures in response to additional

Bering Sea and Arctic Ocean ship traffic that followed diminished sea ice brought on by climate warming. The work culminated with a Coast Guard port access route study submitted last year.

Environmen­tal groups pushed for safe shipping measures. They say there are few resources north or south of the Bering Strait to respond to a spill that could cause serious damage to important marine resources such as bowhead and beluga whales, Pacific walruses, ice seals, spectacled eiders and other seabirds.

“These measures will keep vessels on the safest course and reduce the risk of them running aground, colliding, or interferin­g directly with subsistenc­e hunting,” said Eleanor Huffines of Pew Charitable Trusts.

The routes do not limit fishing or subsistenc­e hunting.

The eastern Bering Sea along Alaska’s coast is biological­ly productive in part because it’s shallow. Average depths in the eastern Bering range from six to 75 metres. The Coast Guard plotted lanes ensuring ships of water depths of at least 18.3 metres.

Austin Ahmasuk, marine advocate for Kawerak Inc., representi­ng 20 Alaska Native villages in the Bering Strait region, travelled from his home in Nome to London to push for the routes. The region is “massively unprepared” for oil spill response, he said.

The three areas to be protected are in the Bering Sea and represent hazards for ships, Ahmasuk said, but also are important cultural, historical and hunting sites.

 ??  ?? A Finnish icebreaker sails past the U.S. island of Little Diomede, left, and behind it, the Russian island of Big Diomede, separated by the Internatio­nal Date Line on the Bering Strait.
A Finnish icebreaker sails past the U.S. island of Little Diomede, left, and behind it, the Russian island of Big Diomede, separated by the Internatio­nal Date Line on the Bering Strait.

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