However, there is another perspective.
“The Arctic Council is not based on laws and agreements but it has built a foundation on shared norms and values,” Heather Exner-Pirot of the University of Saskatchewan in Canada has written. “This has proven a boon to the organization.” She argues that the consensus based approach means Arctic politics is not a “zero sum game” but seeks compromise. This is a “victory for soft law.”
Nevertheless, there is another discourse these days that looks at the Arctic as a potential zone of conflict in the future that may play out between the great powers over the coming years. Some of this debate is over who owns the continental shelf under the multi-year sea ice that has covered parts of the Arctic Ocean since the last ice age but which is now rapidly disappearing and raising global interest in opportunities to exploit the region’s resources. However, it’s not the Wild West. Access to the shelf is being determined through a long process under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.
Rapidly melting sea ice is not just regional geopolitical issue – it has consequences for the entire planet. Change is happening so quickly that the Arctic is moving from being the world’s cooling system to a driver of climate change. “These changes represent a spiritual impoverishment of the earth, as well as a practical catastrophe for humanity,” writes Peter Wadhams, an emeritus professor of ocean physics at Cambridge University. “The time for action has long since passed.”
When it gathers for its biannual meeting this week in Portland, Maine, the members of the Arctic Council will take a moment to acknowledge the organization’s many important scientific contributions over the last 20 years. They will then turn their attention to a full agenda, which includes climate change.
As they do, Prof. Wadham’s words are a stark reminder of how much, and how quickly, the Arctic has changed since 1996. How to deal with new Arctic realities, such as the potential of open Arctic waters in the next few years, will challenge the council and test its relevance in the coming years.