Current:Home > MarketsRekubit-A new Iron Curtain is eroding Norway's hard-won ties with Russia on Arctic issues -Capitatum
Rekubit-A new Iron Curtain is eroding Norway's hard-won ties with Russia on Arctic issues
Benjamin Ashford View
Date:2025-04-07 02:42:02
Capt. Pal Bratbak has patrolled the Barents Sea for decades. His Norwegian coast guard search and Rekubitrescue cutter mostly chases after distress calls from fishermen. The fishermen are chasing the cod — and the cod sometimes lead them astray.
"The codfish, they don't see the border, so we help every boat in our area," he says, and that means as many Russian boats as Norwegian. A treaty allows both nations to catch a quota, and that management of the Barents Sea Arctic cod fleet is considered a success worldwide, both economically and environmentally.
"That's important for Norway and the European Union and NATO and the whole world. And it's important for the Russians," he says.
Cooperation like that has been a given on the Russian-Norwegian frontier for decades, if not centuries. The Norwegians call it "high north, low tension."
Since Russia's invasion of Ukraine, though, that tension isn't so low, and Bratbak is worried. The coast guard also enforces the fishing laws in the Barents Sea.
Years ago, in a rare case, a Russian trawler fled from a coast guard ship, into Russian waters — with Norwegian inspectors on board. Back then, Russian authorities promptly arrested the captain and returned the inspectors. Bratbak hopes the same cooperation would happen today, but his confidence is a bit shaken by recent events.
"In these days, Russia can use other methods to negotiate. Like in the Ukraine conflict, they are willing to use power (more) than talking," he says.
Critical climate work is on hold
As a founding member of NATO, Norway's government has joined the rest of Europe in isolating Russia. But as a country bordering Russia, it's feeling the effects more immediately than some others — in everything from Arctic climate action and nuclear waste control to cross-border trade and regional sports leagues.
The protection of the pristine waters of the Arctic, as well as that cod fleet Capt. Bratbak mentioned, falls under an international group called the Arctic Council. The rotating chair of that group is currently Russia, and as such the council has suspended all activities, including crucial research on climate change.
"It's not something you can point out that failed today, but it's ongoing," says Kim Holmen with the Norwegian Polar Institute in Tromso, where the Arctic Council would normally be coordinating research.
Russia has about half of the world's Arctic landmass, including permafrost that, if it melts, could release megatons of trapped carbon and greenhouse gases.
Scientists like Holmen count on collaboration with their Russian colleagues.
"We have common publications. We have collected data together. We've been on each other's cruises. I've been to people's homes in Saint Petersburg, good friends," he says.
Holmen isn't in contact with those friends right now. He's been working on the Arctic for more than 30 years, and he says the lesson from back in the Soviet days is that communication will only get them into trouble, which would delay getting back to work.
"Polar scientists are used to the cold," says Holmen. "We hope and wish to pick up when it thaws."
"We are seeing the Iron Curtain come back"
For residents of the border city of Kirkenes, their world changed overnight.
Guro Brandshaug is CEO of the Kirkenes Conference, an annual businesses summit between Russia and Norway. This was the 14th year the event was held, and, on a weeknight in February, it all started out relatively normally.
"On Wednesday the 23rd I welcomed our foreign minister and the Russian ambassador," says Brandshaug.
With Russian troops massed on the Ukrainian border, she says, it was tense. But Kirkenes is a city built on friendly relations with Russia, and Brandshaug says no one she knew thought Russian President Vladimir Putin would really invade.
"And then we woke up on the morning on the 24th," she says. "The Russians had started bombing Ukraine. It was a huge shock. People were actually crying."
A nuclear waste dump poses a constant threat
"Everything that has been built up over the last 30 years, was just washed out in a few days. We are seeing the Iron Curtain coming back," says Thomas Nilsen with the Barents Observer newspaper in Kirkenes.
The new Iron Curtain severed personal ties, economic links and even scuttled issues of mutual survival, Nilsen says. For years, Norway had been helping Russia safely dispose of spent fuel rods from its aging nuclear submarines, which were stationed in the Arctic.
At a park station in Svanvik, scientist Bredo Moller collects air samples for the Norwegian radiation safety authority.
"We are some, some kind of a nuclear watchdog on the border to Russia," he says. "That's more or less why we're here — to monitor what's on the other side of the border, just a few kilometers from here."
He's referring to one of the world's biggest nuclear waste dumps, across the border, where tons of waste from Russian power plants and aging submarines pose a constant threat, either as a contaminant to the Arctic sea life or as material in a terrorist dirty bomb.
Moller says that just last November, Norway marked 25 years of cooperation on nuclear cleanup, and he went to Murmansk in Russia for a celebration with his colleagues.
"I have many friends in Murmansk, shaking their heads like me, waiting for this to end," he says.
Moller is counting on those colleagues to keep up the work of saving the Arctic from nuclear contamination. And he's certain his friends oppose the war in Ukraine just as he does — they just can't speak right now. But it's chilling that many local officials across the border, as well as 700 rectors and university presidents in Russia, have issued strong statements supporting Putin. And that makes Moller worry that even this vital work might not resume soon.
"It will take many, many years I'm afraid, to get back to that trust that we have gained through these 25 years of cooperation. So, yeah, it is frightening times," he says.
veryGood! (668)
Related
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Rafael Nadal reaches first final since 2022 French Open
- Louisiana’s ‘Business-Friendly’ Climate Response: Canceled Home Insurance Plans
- Chanel West Coast Shares Insight Into Motherhood Journey With Daughter Bowie
- Don't let hackers fool you with a 'scam
- Christina Hall and Josh Hall Break Up: See Where More HGTV Couples Stand
- Pig transplant research yields a surprise: Bacon safe for some people allergic to red meat
- Tech outage latest | Airlines rush to get back on track after global tech disruption
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- Salt Lake City wildfire prompts mandatory evacuations as more than 100 firefighters fight blaze
Ranking
- Intellectuals vs. The Internet
- The Buck Moon is almost here. Here's when and where to see July's full moon.
- A 12-year-old girl is accused of smothering her 8-year-old cousin over an iPhone
- Beltré, Helton, Mauer and Leyland inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame
- This was the average Social Security benefit in 2004, and here's what it is now
- Gabby Douglas Reveals Future Olympic Plans After Missing 2024 Paris Games
- New Hampshire governor signs bill banning transgender girls from girls' sports
- A Tennessee highway trooper is shot along Interstate 40, and two suspects are on the run
Recommendation
Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
Florida man arrested, accused of making threats against Trump, Vance on social media
Chanel West Coast Shares Insight Into Motherhood Journey With Daughter Bowie
Esta TerBlanche, All My Children Star, Dead at 51
Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
Man pleads guilty to federal charges in attack on Louisville mayoral candidate
What is Microsoft's blue screen of death? Here's what it means and how to fix it.
Bronny James, Dalton Knecht held out of Lakers' Summer League finale