The Scotsman

Internet could breach Iceland’s much-loved digital-free frontier

- By EGILL BJARNASON in Hornstrand­ir newsdeskts@scotsman.com

The passenger boat arrives at the bottom of Veidileysu­fjordur, a short inlet with a long name, to drop off backpacker­s for a multi-day trek. A weather-beaten group that’s completed the trip waits to board, eager to get back to a part of Iceland where they can reconnect with the world via wi-fi.

By boat, that will take about half an hour. No roads lead to the Nordic country’s northernmo­st peninsula, a rugged glacial horn that reaches for the Arctic Circle. Making a phone call requires walking up a mountain for a mobile phone signal so weak, clouds seem capable of blocking it.

But internet service soon could be reaching the Hornstrand­ir Nature Reserve, one of the last digital-free frontiers in what might be the world’s most-wired nation. The possibilit­y has most hikers, park rangers and summer residentsw­orriedthat­email,news and social media will destroy a way of life that depends on the absence of all three.

“We see a growing appreciati­on for the lack of online connection,” environmen­t agency of Iceland ranger Vesteinn Runarsson, who patrols the peninsula’s southern end on his own. “Looking to the future, we want to keep Hornstrand­ir special in that way.”

The area has long resisted mobile phone towers, but commercial initiative­s could take the decision out of Icelanders’ hands and push Hornstrand­ir across the digital divide.

Companies such as Elon Musk’s Spacex are racing to deliver high-speed internet service to every inch of the world by putting thousands of small satellites into low Earth orbit. Their success would have global implicatio­ns, bringing the benefits and downsides of internet communicat­ion to places that are off the grid because of poverty or war, or where internet access is reserved for the wealthy.

That’s also true for sparsely populated communitie­s and far-flung destinatio­ns in Canada, Russia, Alaska and elsewhere in the vast Arctic region, where broadband service generally is prohibitiv­ely expensive.

Yet in Iceland, the prospect of constant connectivi­ty has called up an old debate on whether Hornstrand­ir’s wilderness should stay unwired.

Despite, or because of, its remoteness, Iceland ranks first on a UN index comparing nations by informatio­n technology use, with roughly 98 per cent of the population using the internet.

Among adults, 93 per cent report having Facebook accounts and two-thirds are Snapchat users, according to pollster MMR.

Many people who live in north-western Iceland or visit as outdoor enthusiast­s want Hornstrand­ir’s 220 square miles, which accounts for 0.6 per cent of Iceland’s land mass, to be declared a “digital-free zone”.

 ?? PICTURE: EGILL BJARNASON ?? 0 An Icelandic environmen­t agency ranger attempts to get a signal on the unofficial­ly named Telephone Mountain in the country’s remote north-west
PICTURE: EGILL BJARNASON 0 An Icelandic environmen­t agency ranger attempts to get a signal on the unofficial­ly named Telephone Mountain in the country’s remote north-west

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