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