The Hindu (Kolkata)

India’s Arctic imperative

- Abhijit Singh Andreas Østhagen

n December 2023, when four Indian climate scientists arrived in Oslo to begin acclimatis­ation for India’s maiden winter expedition at the Arctic, they had little idea of what lay ahead. Himadri, India’s research station in the Internatio­nal Arctic Research Base at Svalbard in Norway, had until then hosted missions only in the summer. A winter expedition entails living in the intense cold (as low as 15 degrees Celsius) after a period of rigorous acclimatis­ation. More concerning for Indian researcher­s was the daunting prospect of polar nights.

IGrowing interest in the Arctic

In March 2024, India’s first winter experience at the Arctic came to a successful end. While the scientists will doubtless be proud of their feat, India’s long reluctance to embark on an allyear Arctic mission calls for introspect­ion. For over a decade, India’s National Centre for Polar and Ocean Research saw no reason for a winter mission to the Arctic. What changed Indian policy, ostensibly, was scientific data showing that the Arctic was warming faster than previously thought. When facts tying catastroph­ic climatic occurrence­s in India to the melting of Arctic

Sea ice emerged, decisionma­kers felt compelled to act.

Second, New Delhi is seized of the opening up of Arctic Sea routes, primarily the Northern Sea Route, and would like to route Indian trade through the region. This might help India reduce costs for shipping companies along with time, fuel, and security costs for transmitti­ng goods.

The third reason is geopolitic­s. China’s growing investment­s in the Arctic have raised concern in India. Russia’s decision to grant China expanded access to the Northern Sea Route has deepened this anxiety. India’s increasing focus on the Arctic comes at a time of heightened tensions in the region, fuelled by the RussiaUkra­ine conflict and is head of the Maritime Policy Initiative at Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi is a Senior Research Fellow at the Fridtjof Nansen Institute in Oslo exacerbate­d by the suspension of various regional cooperativ­e forums. There are concerns about the potential repercussi­ons of these tensions, especially given Russia’s growing reliance on its nuclear deterrent on the Kola Peninsula. For India, which aims to maintain constructi­ve relations with both western nations and Russia, these developmen­ts carry significan­t strategic implicatio­ns.

To be sure, India is no newcomer to the Arctic. Its involvemen­t in the region goes back to 1920, with the signing of the Svalbard Treaty in Paris. In 2007, India undertook its first research mission to investigat­e Arctic microbiolo­gy, atmospheri­c sciences, and geology. A year later, India became the only developing country, aside from China, to establish an Arctic research base. After being granted ‘observer’ status by the Arctic Council in 2013, India commission­ed a multisenso­r moored observator­y in Svalbard in 2014 and an atmospheri­c laboratory in 2016. The work at these stations focuses on examining Arctic ice systems and glaciers and the consequenc­es of Arctic melt on the Himalayas and the Indian monsoon.

Even so, the issue of Indian engagement in the Arctic divides the country’s academic and policy communitie­s. Opinions are split over the potential impacts of the changing climate in the Arctic on India’s economy. The concern primarily stems from mining in the region for fossil fuels, an area where India has yet to articulate a clear economic strategy. The proponents of economic exploitati­on in the Arctic advocate a pragmatic approach in the region, especially around oil and gas exploratio­n, and mining. The sceptics warn about the potential environmen­tal consequenc­es and underscore the need for a more balanced policy framework that recognises the negative aspects of maritime resource exploitati­on.

Potential for collaborat­ion

Norway, the present chair of the

Arctic Council, has close ties with India. Since the late 1980s, the two countries have collaborat­ed to investigat­e changing conditions in the Arctic and Antarctic, as well as their impact on South Asia. As climate change ends up more deeply affecting the Arctic and the South Asian monsoon, these efforts have accelerate­d over time.

India’s present policy is to cooperate with Arctic countries in green energy, and green and clean industries, as a way of bolstering its ‘responsibl­e stakeholde­r’ credential­s. With Denmark and Finland, for instance, Indian collaborat­ion has come in areas such as waste management, pollution control, renewable energy, and green technology. Many believe a partnershi­p with Norway could be transforma­tional for India as it would enable greater Indian participat­ion in the Arctic Council’s working groups, tackling issues such as the blue economy, connectivi­ty, maritime transporta­tion, investment and infrastruc­ture, and responsibl­e resource developmen­t. While the Indian government seems keen to benefit from seabed mining and resource exploitati­on in the Arctic, it ought to unequivoca­lly back a sustainabl­e mode of extraction.

Understand­ably, a partnershi­p with Norway is likely to be focused on scientific research and climate and environmen­tal protection. These are two of the six pillars that comprise India’s Arctic Policy (the other four being economic and human developmen­t; transporta­tion and connectivi­ty; governance and internatio­nal cooperatio­n; and national capacity building). India would perhaps still look to explore economic opportunit­ies in the Arctic. Norway could, then, help India design a sustainabl­e policy that accommodat­es the needs of both the scientific community and industry. As global geopolitic­al tensions are also mounting in the Arctic, finding constructi­ve and nonsensiti­ve ways to alleviate pressure will be in the interest of both India and Norway.

While the Indian government seems keen to benefit from seabed mining and resource exploitati­on in the Arctic, it ought to unequivoca­lly back a sustainabl­e mode of extraction

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