Societal impact of climate change and new Arctic shipping routes on shipping in Greenland

According to the narratives transmitted through media and political discourse, climate change reduces the ice coverage in the Arctic and enhances shipping and other forms of maritime activities. Especially, expectations of an increasing level of transit shipping between Asian, especially Chinese, po...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jakobsen, Uffe
Other Authors: Bouland, Yannis
Format: Other Non-Article Part of Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Institut d'Études de Géopolitique Appliquée 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://curis.ku.dk/portal/da/publications/societal-impact-of-climate-change-and-new-arctic-shipping-routes-on-shipping-in-greenland(bcdaa0cd-65e6-4fd6-af64-e372ba745f39).html
https://www.institut-ega.org/l/les-routes-maritimes-arctiques-vers-une-redefinition-des-axes-commerciaux/
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Summary:According to the narratives transmitted through media and political discourse, climate change reduces the ice coverage in the Arctic and enhances shipping and other forms of maritime activities. Especially, expectations of an increasing level of transit shipping between Asian, especially Chinese, ports and ports in Europe and North America is dominant. Evidence, however, tells that the numbers of transit shipping through the Arctic Ocean are very limited, and dominated by European shipping companies. For Greenland, political expectations have also been high, since Greenland has been seen as "strategically" situated in relation to new shipping routes in the Arctic, But, again, the actual development has been moderate and not related to international transits but conditions in Greenland itself.