POLICY CONSIDERATIONS AND SUGGESTIONS FOR AN EVOLVING ARCTIC SHIPPING REGIME: A PRIMER FOR CANADIAN POLICY MAKERS

A popular narrative suggests that climate change-induced year-over-year net sea ice melt will incentivize global shipping traffic to redirect itself en masse through the Northwest Passage. As Canada and foreign states do not agree on whether the Northwest Passage constitutes a legallydefined interna...

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Main Author: Farrell, Ryan
Other Authors: Finnie, Ross
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/40936
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spelling ftunivottawa:oai:ruor.uottawa.ca:10393/40936 2023-05-15T14:35:07+02:00 POLICY CONSIDERATIONS AND SUGGESTIONS FOR AN EVOLVING ARCTIC SHIPPING REGIME: A PRIMER FOR CANADIAN POLICY MAKERS Farrell, Ryan Finnie, Ross 2020 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10393/40936 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10393/40936 Research Paper 2020 ftunivottawa 2021-01-04T14:45:24Z A popular narrative suggests that climate change-induced year-over-year net sea ice melt will incentivize global shipping traffic to redirect itself en masse through the Northwest Passage. As Canada and foreign states do not agree on whether the Northwest Passage constitutes a legallydefined international strait, the extent to which this theory is true will have consequences for Canada’s national interest. This paper analyzes and compares the existing body of climatological and shipping profitability projections in order to assess the likelihood that conflict will increase as a result of this disagreement. It then analyzes these projections in relation to Canada’s current policy regime, the interests of major foreign states, and the potential economic effects that increased shipping would have on Canadian Inuit populations. In light of these considerations, it offers policy recommendations tailored to the economic and political circumstances of the Canadian Arctic: that the Government of Canada should recognize the limitations of its current policy regime, advocate for a stricter understanding of international maritime law, increase its Arctic military presence, strengthen environmental regulations, promote Arctic cruise tourism, seek greater cooperation with both the United States and Russia, and adopt a more defensive stance against the Chinese government’s attempts to expand its influence in the region. Keywords: Northwest Passage, Arctic shipping, Arctic sovereignty, Arctic policy Report Arctic Climate change inuit Northwest passage Sea ice uO Research (University of Ottawa - uOttawa) Arctic Canada Northwest Passage
institution Open Polar
collection uO Research (University of Ottawa - uOttawa)
op_collection_id ftunivottawa
language English
description A popular narrative suggests that climate change-induced year-over-year net sea ice melt will incentivize global shipping traffic to redirect itself en masse through the Northwest Passage. As Canada and foreign states do not agree on whether the Northwest Passage constitutes a legallydefined international strait, the extent to which this theory is true will have consequences for Canada’s national interest. This paper analyzes and compares the existing body of climatological and shipping profitability projections in order to assess the likelihood that conflict will increase as a result of this disagreement. It then analyzes these projections in relation to Canada’s current policy regime, the interests of major foreign states, and the potential economic effects that increased shipping would have on Canadian Inuit populations. In light of these considerations, it offers policy recommendations tailored to the economic and political circumstances of the Canadian Arctic: that the Government of Canada should recognize the limitations of its current policy regime, advocate for a stricter understanding of international maritime law, increase its Arctic military presence, strengthen environmental regulations, promote Arctic cruise tourism, seek greater cooperation with both the United States and Russia, and adopt a more defensive stance against the Chinese government’s attempts to expand its influence in the region. Keywords: Northwest Passage, Arctic shipping, Arctic sovereignty, Arctic policy
author2 Finnie, Ross
format Report
author Farrell, Ryan
spellingShingle Farrell, Ryan
POLICY CONSIDERATIONS AND SUGGESTIONS FOR AN EVOLVING ARCTIC SHIPPING REGIME: A PRIMER FOR CANADIAN POLICY MAKERS
author_facet Farrell, Ryan
author_sort Farrell, Ryan
title POLICY CONSIDERATIONS AND SUGGESTIONS FOR AN EVOLVING ARCTIC SHIPPING REGIME: A PRIMER FOR CANADIAN POLICY MAKERS
title_short POLICY CONSIDERATIONS AND SUGGESTIONS FOR AN EVOLVING ARCTIC SHIPPING REGIME: A PRIMER FOR CANADIAN POLICY MAKERS
title_full POLICY CONSIDERATIONS AND SUGGESTIONS FOR AN EVOLVING ARCTIC SHIPPING REGIME: A PRIMER FOR CANADIAN POLICY MAKERS
title_fullStr POLICY CONSIDERATIONS AND SUGGESTIONS FOR AN EVOLVING ARCTIC SHIPPING REGIME: A PRIMER FOR CANADIAN POLICY MAKERS
title_full_unstemmed POLICY CONSIDERATIONS AND SUGGESTIONS FOR AN EVOLVING ARCTIC SHIPPING REGIME: A PRIMER FOR CANADIAN POLICY MAKERS
title_sort policy considerations and suggestions for an evolving arctic shipping regime: a primer for canadian policy makers
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/40936
geographic Arctic
Canada
Northwest Passage
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
Northwest Passage
genre Arctic
Climate change
inuit
Northwest passage
Sea ice
genre_facet Arctic
Climate change
inuit
Northwest passage
Sea ice
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10393/40936
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