The Peterborough Examiner

Russia submits claim for bigger piece of Arctic Ocean seabed

Bid filed to UN agency seeks entire Canadian, Danish continenta­l shelf

- EMMA TRANTER

Russia wants to stretch out imaginary lines on the ocean floor — and below it — and that has one northern security expert worried about consequenc­es for other Arctic countries like Canada.

Last week, Russia filed a submission to the United Nations Commission on the Limits of the Continenta­l Shelf to extend a claim to the Arctic Ocean seabed.

The UN still has to review the submission but, if it’s approved, Russia would have exclusive rights to resources in the seabed and below it, but not in the water.

The new submission would push Russia’s claim all the way up to Canada’s exclusive economic zone, an area 200 nautical miles from the coastline, in which Canadians have sole rights to fish, drill and pursue other economic activities.

Philip Steinberg, a political geography professor at the University of Durham in the United Kingdom, estimates Russia’s submission expands its original claim by about 705,000 square kilometres.

Robert Huebert, a political science professor at the University of Calgary, said Russia’s request gets as close to Canada’s 200-mile limit as possible.

“This is a maximalist submission. You cannot claim any more,” said Huebert, an Arctic security and defence analyst with the Centre for Military and Strategic Studies.

Countries have sovereignt­y over their zones but can submit scientific evidence to the UN to claim control over the soil and subsoil of the extended continenta­l shelf.

Russia’s amended submission overlaps with those from Canada and Denmark, but does not extend into the north of Alaska.

“In effect, they’re claiming the entire Arctic Ocean as their continenta­l shelf in regards to where their Arctic comes up against Canada’s and Denmark’s.” Huebert said.

The claims from Canada, Denmark (on behalf of Greenland), and Russia already overlap at the North Pole, but the amended claim goes beyond that, Huebert said.

“We haven’t seen a country before that’s extended over its neighbours. Here’s a situation where they’re claiming the entire Canadian and Danish continenta­l shelf as part of their continenta­l shelf.”

Huebert noted there have been recent reports of an increased Russian military presence on the Ukrainian border over the last two weeks.

“If the Russians reinvigora­te the conflict with Ukraine, that is going to spill into all of this.” he said. “I don’t think anyone should assume that Russia will do anything less than pursue its maximum foreign policy interests.”

Whitney Lackenbaue­r, a professor at Trent University who specialize­s in circumpola­r affairs, disagrees.

“Russia is playing by the rules. And for those of us who are concerned about Russia’s flouting of the rules-based order, I actually take a great deal of comfort in seeing Russia go through the establishe­d process in this particular case,” Lackenbaue­r said. He believes Russia’s submission signals eventual talks between the three countries to determine the limits.

“Setting out to negotiate where the outermost limits would be was something that was always in the cards,” Lackenbaue­r said.

A spokespers­on for Global Affairs Canada said Canada “remains firmly committed to exercising in full its sovereign rights in the Arctic” according to internatio­nal law. It said Canada is studying Russia’s claim on its outer limits to prepare an appropriat­e response.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A Russian flag was planted by the Mir-1 mini submarine on the Arctic Ocean seabed under the North Pole in 2007. Russia has submitted a bid for vast territorie­s in the Arctic to the UN.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO A Russian flag was planted by the Mir-1 mini submarine on the Arctic Ocean seabed under the North Pole in 2007. Russia has submitted a bid for vast territorie­s in the Arctic to the UN.

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