Arctic Council tensions threaten environment as Canada exits chair - Action News
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Politics

Arctic Council tensions threaten environment as Canada exits chair

Canada is being urged to avoid dragging politics into today's Arctic Council meeting in Iqaluit. But are tensions with Russia already affecting the agenda?

NGO plays go-between as Russian sanctions over Ukraine set back joint action on fuel clean-up

RAW: Kerry arrives in Iqaluit

9 years ago
Duration 1:58
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry arrives in Iqaluit for Friday's Arctic Council meeting.

Canada is being urged to avoid dragging politics into today's Arctic Council meeting in Iqaluit.

But as senior diplomats and ministers from eight Arctic nations arrive in the capital of Nunavut, there are indications Canada has already allowed tensions with Russia to affect the agenda.

The one-day ministerial meeting held every two yearswas supposed to be preceded by a day-long event in Ottawa this week to highlightCanada's accomplishments over its two-yearchairmanship of the council, which isnow ending.

That event was abruptly cancelled in February after months of planning.

Environment Minister Leona Aglukkaqciteslogistical reasons.

"Ideas were bounced around about showcasing the initiatives of the territories here in Ottawa," said Aglukkaq in an interview with CBC News.

"For the challenges of everything happening all at once, we decided we wouldn't do that."

Canada-Russia tiff?

9 years ago
Duration 1:20
Environment Minister and outgoing chair of the Arctic Council Leona Aglukkaq says the Arctic Council operates on a consensus basis.

Concerns in 'geopolitical and security context'

Documents obtained by CBC suggestthe decision was political.

A top foreign affairs official, Susan Harper, sent a letter to Arctic Council members on Feb.28, informing them of "a decision today, at senior levels of the Canadian government, to not proceed with the Ottawa Arctic Council showcase, planned for April 23."

"In the current geopolitical and security context, there were growing concerns about this event."

Sources tell CBC that they worried about the optics of senior Russian officials visiting Ottawa, givencontinuing tensions over Ukraine.

Environment Minister Leona Aglukkaq says an Arctic Council event scheduled for Ottawa this week was cancelled for logistical reasons. But a document shared with CBC News suggest politics - specifically Canada's dispute with Russia over Ukraine - was at play. (CBC News)
Russia recently announced Foreign Affairs MinisterSergei Lavrov, who has been to every council meeting since 2004, won't be inIqaluit. Theirdelegation will be led by Russia'senvironment minister,Sergei Donskoi.

Aglukkaq said she plans to raise Ukraine with the Russiansduring the meeting.

That would be a marked departure: The council has operated for nearly 20 years on consensus and has always avoided getting bogged down by geopolitics.


Who sits on the Arctic Council?

  • Canada, United States, Russia, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Iceland.
  • Circumpolar indigenous groups are permanent members.

The council's mandate is to protect the Arctic environment and promote sustainable development in the northern communities that share the top of the world. The philosophy is that the only way to succeed in such a remote area is to work together.

Dysfunction risks fuel spill

Environmentalists warnpolitical tensions make it hard to manage environmental threats.

For example, WWF Canada (the World Wildlife Fund) says an abandoned, fuel-laden barge hasbeen allowed to drift through the Arctic Ocean and is now frozen in the iceabout 80 kilometres off Russia's northeast coast.

The barge is owned by aCanadian company, Northern TransportationCompany Limited (NTCL.)It broke free from its tow boat during a storm lastOctober in the Beaufort Sea near Tuktoyaktuk,NWT, anddrifted throughAmerican waters, then into Russia's Chukchi Sea.

This map from the WWF shows how a Canadian barge broke free from its tow line and drifted through Canadian and American waters before becoming trapped in ice in an area under Russian jurisdiction. Now efforts to prevent a fuel spill are hindered by geopolitics. (WWF)

The U.S. Coast Guard dropped a GPS device on the barge to keep track of itsmovements.But the U.S. and Canadian coast guards aren't talking to Russia. So theWWF is acting as a go-between, providing information.

Alexey Knizhnikov, head of extractive industry and environmental policy forWWF Russia, calls it "bizarre."

"We see it as weakness of the Arctic states' ability to conduct joint rescueoperations because of the problem of sanctions of the Russian regime," hesaid in an interview from Moscow.

The barge has 3,500 litres of fuel. Not a lot, according to Knizhnikov, butenough to threaten the summer habitat of colonies of Pacific walrus that livethere in the summer.

"Even a small amount of fuel could be toxic for the feeding area," saidKnizhnikov

NTCL says it will retrieve the vessel in July when the ice melts.

Knizhnikov isn't sure how that will happen if the countries aren't talking.

Americans unimpressed?

The U.S., nowtakingover the chair, is expected to pressure Canada to back off on Russia.

"The Obamaadministration has been very clear that Arctic co-operation must continue," said Michael Byers, international affairs professor at the University of British Columbia,"that the issues of climate change in the Arctic are simply too important to be caught up in the tensions in Ukraine and eastern Europe.

"The Canadian government will be causing serious problems with its relationship with Washington, as well as with Moscow, if it seeks to bring the Ukrainian situation into the Arctic Council," Byers said.

But Aglukkaq, who hands the helmto U.S. Secretary of State John Kerryon Friday, says tensions won't get in the way.

"We condemn what Russia is doing to Ukraine and sanctions have been taken against Russia" she told CBC. "We've been very, very clear as a country."

But she added, "the Arctic council operates on a consensus basis.The initiatives that we undertook during our chairmanship, those were decided two years ago'' long before the latestdisputeswith Russia.

"Like any conference ... there are challenges," she said.

Arctic Council priorities

9 years ago
Duration 1:04
Environment Minister Leona Aglukkaq says that Canada's priorities for its chairmanship at the Arctic Council were set two years ago, before its disagreement with Russia over Ukraine began.