Edmonton Journal

Russian LNG tanker makes it through Northeast Passage

- Ian Macleod

OTTAWA – A Russian tanker laden with liquefied natural gas has become the first ship of its kind to complete a winter voyage from northern Europe to Asia via the melting Arctic Ocean.

The 6,000-kilometre journey through the Northern Sea Route by the LNG carrier Ob River slashed 20 days off the traditiona­l route, cut fuel consumptio­n by 40 per cent and establishe­d a viable new yearround route for energy markets and global trade through the once-impenetrab­le polar ice cap.

The feat ended Thursday when Ob River, chartered by the Russian gas giant Gazprom, arrived without incident at the port of Tobata in southwest Japan with 134,000 cubic metres of liquefied natural gas loaded at Hammerfest in northern Norway.

The Northern Sea Route, also known as the Northeast Passage, is a treacherou­s shipping lane running from Murmansk in the Barents Sea, along Russia’s Arctic coast to the Bering Strait. It links the Atlantic and Pacific oceans without having to transit the Suez or Panama canals, reducing travel distances by thousands of kilometres.

Two German bulk cargo carriers successful­ly navigated the iceberg-infested passage in the summer of 2009 on a trip from South Korea to the Netherland­s. But no mariners have attempted a winter passage of such magnitude.

The Ob River’s voyage began Nov. 7, when the large carrier left port and rendezvous­ed with a nuclear-powered Russian icebreaker escort. Yet the crews found waters of the Barents and Kara Sea mostly ice-free, while the passage between Vilkitskog­o and the Bering Strait had only 30-centimetre thick “young ice,” Gazprom said in a statement.

The pioneering voyage advances Russia’s plan to turn the Northeast Passage into a key shipping route and to modernize its Arctic infrastruc­ture so Moscow can stake out a claim over the energy-rich region.

As climate change leads to a shrinking ice cap in the Arctic, opening of the Northern Sea Route means a “shorter delivery time, fuel economy” and fewer piracy risks” among other advantages, Gazprom said.

Canada has similar dreams for the Northwest Passage, which has seen year-overyear increases in the number of large ships passing through. In 2011, 22 transits took place, an increase over the 18 in 2010.

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