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West, Russia manage restricted cooperation in Arctic regardless of chill in ties

When Arctic nations simulated a. large oil spill for a virtual training workout in March off. northern Norway, Russia likewise took part a rare indication of. cooperation between Moscow and the West that highlighted the. special status of the polar area.

Relations in between Russia and Western countries have actually remained in. the deep freeze given that Moscow's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in. February 2022, but Norway has actually been keen to keep some limited. cooperation alive through the Arctic Council.

We had good interaction (during the oil spill workout). with all states, consisting of Russia, and Russia likewise offered. help and we accepted that, said Ole Kristian Bjerkemo,. chair of the Arctic Council's Emergency Prevention, Preparedness. and Reaction working group, which led the drill.

Russia simulated sending 2 vessels to the workout, he. stated.

The Council comprises all eight Arctic countries - the United. States, Canada, Norway, Finland, Sweden, Denmark, Iceland and. Russia - and handles problems ranging from pollution and financial. advancement to search-and-rescue missions.

The 7 Western nations - all now members of the NATO. military alliance - stopped briefly cooperation with Moscow after its. invasion of Ukraine, putting a 3rd of the Council's 130. tasks on hold due to the fact that of direct Russian participation, and. fuelling concerns that the forum might entirely collapse.

The loss of its work would jeopardise Arctic security and. undermine efforts to deal with environment change throughout a region that. is warming four times faster than the rest of the world,. diplomats said.

Norway, which assumed the Council's turning two-year. chairship last May, stated it wanted to prevent such an outcome.

The main objective for the Norwegian chairship has been to. ensure that the structure survives, since we can not manage. to lose it, Norway's deputy foreign minister Maria Varteressian. told .

ARCTIC 'EXCEPTIONALISM'

The Council, established in 1996, has actually long been viewed as a secret. arena for cooperation between the West and Russia, producing. binding agreements on environmental protection and conservation.

Russia comprises approximately a 3rd of the entire Arctic area. and is behind nearly 70% of financial activity in high latitudes.

We understood this chairship would be an incredibly difficult. and challenging one, said Norway's Morten Hoeglund, Chair of the. Senior Arctic Officials who is now tasked with balancing. relations in between the Council's Western members and Russia.

Russia's Arctic Council ambassador did not react to a. ask for comment for this short article.

At the start of the Ukraine war, many polar experts declared. the end of Arctic exceptionalism - a post-Cold War concept. that characterises the Arctic as such an unique location due to its. geography and history that it is immune to some geopolitical. stress and is therefore an arena for peaceful cooperation.

Some recent advancements have actually reinforced the experts'. pessimism.

Last September, Russia withdrew from the Barents Euro-Arctic. Council, another Arctic regional online forum. And in February, Russia. suspended its yearly voluntary payments to the Arctic Council,. mentioning the needs for genuine work to resume, involving the. participation of all member nations.

However, the Arctic Council's secretariat stated in February. it would resume working group conferences on ecological and. safety problems in a virtual format, with Russia at the table, and. some analysts saw premises for hope.

What we're seeing throughout Norway's chairship reveals that. cooperation is still possible, said Pavel Devyatkin, a. Moscow-based scientist with the U.S. think tank the Arctic. Institute.

The Council working group devoted to keeping an eye on the. region's climate and environment will soon release 3 reports. -- on changes to the Arctic climate, microplastic contamination and. radioactivity-- that had actually been postponed by the Ukraine war.

The radioactivity report required substantial input from. Moscow as it has a Russian co-lead author and includes extensive. Russian data, stated Rolf Roedven, executive secretary of the. Arctic Tracking and Assessment Programme working group.

Norway and Russia share an Arctic border, and team up on. practical issues such as managing fisheries in the Barents Sea--. work which has actually continued considering that the intrusion of Ukraine.

Practical cooperation at the clinical or technical level. may be the method to go, but contacts at the political level on the. Council are unimaginable while the war continues, officials. stated.

We have to adapt to a new truth, Hoeglund stated. We have. to accept ... that this is a various reality than it was four. years ago. It is certainly not going to be anything resembling. what it was at that time.

(source: Reuters)