SUBSCRIBE | NEWSLETTERS | MAPS | VIDEOS | BLOGS | MARKETPLACE | CONTESTS
Share your tales of travel & adventure with our step-by-step guide. Upload trail descriptions, photos, video, and more. Get Started
The DAILY DIRT - The nitty and the gritty of outdoor news

Low Arctic Ice Makes Northwest Passage Real

The Northwest Passage shipping route confounded explorers from Vitus Bering to James Cook, and Roald Amundsen spent three years cobbling a sea route together, albeit through commercially unnavigable shallow sections and with a tiny boat. But global warming might create what none of them could ever truly find: The European Space Agency took over 200 satellite photos this month that show Arctic sea ice has shrunk to the lowest levels since record keeping began in 1978. The ice is so low that the photos clearly show a viable northwest passage sea route along the coasts of  Greenland, Canada, and Alaska.

Sea ice coverage has shrunk to about 1 million square miles, which would enable shipping companies to bypass the Panama Canal and potentially save billions of dollars for a short window during the summer. The route won't remain clear for long and is mostly just symbolic, but it points to an eventual stable shipping route, and an Arctic region completely free of sea ice by 2070.

"Routes between Scandinavia and Japan could be almost halved, and a stable and reliable route would mean a lot to certain regions," said  Researcher Claes Ragner of Norway's Fridtjof Nansen Institute. But even if the passage is opening up and polar ice continues to melt, it will take years for such routes to become regular, he said.

"It won't be ice-free all year around and it won't be a stable route all year," Ragner said. "The greatest wish for sea transportation is streamlined and stable routes."

"Shorter transport routes mean less pollution if you can ship products from A to B on the shortest route," he said, "but the fact that the polar ice is melting away is not good for the world in that we're losing the Arctic and the animal life there."
In the increasingly likely event that all the sea ice disappears, energy advocates and environmentalists can probably expect to clash frequently and intensely. In addition to increased shipping, a U.S. study indicates that perhaps 25 percent of the world's undiscovered oil and gas reserves might lie under the ecologically diverse but sensitive Arctic ice. The U.S., Denmark, Norway, Canada, and Russia are already gearing up to secure energy rights to the region. (Russia already won the Early-Bird-Jerk Award by sending two submarines last month to plant their flag under the north pole.)

Instead of racing to ship cell phones from Japan to Europe, I think someone should mount a global-warming awareness expedition to be the first to kayak the Northwest Passage this summer. Who's up for it? Anybody?

— Ted Alvarez

Images Show Arctic Ice Shrinking to Record Low (AP)

READERS COMMENTS

Dear Ted,

I'll do it if I can go on the Russian icebreaker Kapitan Khlebnikov, so long as it has enough provisions to last several weeks to endure the period when it gets trapped by the Arctic ice that does not exist.

http://wattsupwiththat.com/2008/05/27/cold-irony-arctic-sea-ice-traps-climate-tour-icebreaker/
Posted: Jan 21, 2009 Joseph Toomey

ADD A COMMENT

Your Name:

Comment:

My Profile Join Now

Most recent threads

Trailhead Register
Oink, oink
Posted On: Nov 07, 2009
Submitted By: big_load
Trailhead Register
Bobcat in DWGNRA
Posted On: Nov 07, 2009
Submitted By: spindle
Gear Finder

Find the Outdoor Equipment You Need

Find a retailer

Special sections - Expert handbooks for key trails, techniques and gear

BACKPACKER Food & Recipe Center
The ultimate trail-ready archive for all your recipe needs. Click Here

GearFinder
Find all the outdoor equipment you need. Columbia logo

Fix-It Center
Make your gear last forever with this ultimate DIY guide.

Backpacker's Gadget Guide 2009
Pathfinder logo The latest gadgets for technophobes, technogeeks, and everyone in between.

YES! Please send me my 2 FREE trial issues of BACKPACKER
and my FREE digital Survival Skills 101

Your subscription includes the FREE digital Survival Skills 101 – a guide with everything you'll need to get out of trouble fast!
NAME
ADDRESS
ADDRESS 2
CITY
STATE
ZIP CODE
EMAIL (req)

If I like it and decide to continue, I'll pay just $14.95 and receive a full one-year subscription (9 issues in all), a 67% savings off the newsstand price! If for any reason I decide not to continue, I'll write "cancel" on the invoice and owe nothing.

SUBMIT MY ORDER