Berliner Boersenzeitung - Melting ice no guarantee of smooth sailing in fabled Arctic crossing: study

EUR -
AED 4.195896
AFN 71.967184
ALL 95.956105
AMD 431.27557
ANG 2.044865
AOA 1047.516644
ARS 1599.787344
AUD 1.634702
AWG 2.056193
AZN 1.946495
BAM 1.948847
BBD 2.301397
BDT 140.229711
BGN 1.952594
BHD 0.432257
BIF 3397.288168
BMD 1.14233
BND 1.462402
BOB 7.896827
BRL 6.084281
BSD 1.142678
BTN 105.487045
BWP 15.572647
BYN 3.38148
BYR 22389.659747
BZD 2.298331
CAD 1.568476
CDF 2578.238273
CHF 0.909201
CLF 0.026535
CLP 1047.756565
CNY 7.878195
CNH 7.890848
COP 4233.964621
CRC 537.613746
CUC 1.14233
CUP 30.271734
CVE 110.520837
CZK 24.479838
DJF 203.015262
DKK 7.477009
DOP 70.5393
DZD 153.236161
EGP 59.884006
ERN 17.134944
ETB 179.403308
FJD 2.545343
FKP 0.855641
GBP 0.863377
GEL 3.119006
GGP 0.855641
GHS 12.434303
GIP 0.855641
GMD 83.965623
GNF 10029.654109
GTQ 8.762626
GYD 239.087023
HKD 8.940614
HNL 30.35214
HRK 7.540065
HTG 149.847366
HUF 392.670127
IDR 19357.917045
ILS 3.591873
IMP 0.855641
INR 105.912515
IQD 1495.880584
IRR 1509845.563136
ISK 144.280582
JEP 0.855641
JMD 179.309503
JOD 0.809957
JPY 182.457495
KES 147.680807
KGS 99.896384
KHR 4592.165308
KMF 492.344449
KPW 1027.958359
KRW 1718.217946
KWD 0.351198
KYD 0.952311
KZT 559.471354
LAK 24485.834923
LBP 102295.614193
LKR 355.61615
LRD 209.332331
LSL 19.294382
LTL 3.373003
LVL 0.690984
LYD 7.288497
MAD 10.78074
MDL 19.93605
MGA 4746.379797
MKD 61.626885
MMK 2397.971734
MNT 4078.40156
MOP 9.212554
MRU 45.813172
MUR 53.130181
MVR 17.649424
MWK 1984.226873
MXN 20.505277
MYR 4.49907
MZN 73.006714
NAD 19.294377
NGN 1582.701886
NIO 41.946772
NOK 11.133396
NPR 168.779073
NZD 1.97806
OMR 0.440192
PAB 1.142738
PEN 3.941466
PGK 4.931723
PHP 67.873841
PKR 318.995963
PLN 4.281966
PYG 7372.793338
QAR 4.162364
RON 5.097764
RSD 116.198191
RUB 91.672036
RWF 1666.658856
SAR 4.28687
SBD 9.197715
SCR 17.359327
SDG 686.540465
SEK 10.79321
SGD 1.465385
SHP 0.857043
SLE 28.044615
SLL 23954.092472
SOS 652.845538
SRD 42.892234
STD 23643.91593
STN 24.731435
SVC 9.999326
SYP 127.525549
SZL 19.294368
THB 37.04617
TJS 10.953522
TMT 3.998154
TND 3.371058
TOP 2.750455
TRY 50.475779
TTD 7.750451
TWD 36.648261
TZS 2981.304325
UAH 50.396867
UGX 4296.671023
USD 1.14233
UYU 45.906824
UZS 13839.32323
VES 505.714588
VND 30036.413949
VUV 135.891871
WST 3.185202
XAF 653.633653
XAG 0.014184
XAU 0.000227
XCD 3.087203
XCG 2.059579
XDR 0.809113
XOF 652.845459
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.503136
ZAR 19.285383
ZMK 10282.341101
ZMW 22.243643
ZWL 367.829658
  • JRI

    -0.2300

    12.59

    -1.83%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.1100

    22.99

    -0.48%

  • NGG

    0.0900

    90.9

    +0.1%

  • CMSC

    -0.1500

    22.99

    -0.65%

  • BCC

    0.3800

    70

    +0.54%

  • RIO

    -2.8700

    87.83

    -3.27%

  • BCE

    -0.1100

    25.57

    -0.43%

  • GSK

    -0.8900

    53.39

    -1.67%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    34.14

    -0.12%

  • AZN

    -2.6000

    189.9

    -1.37%

  • VOD

    0.1000

    14.41

    +0.69%

  • BTI

    0.0400

    59.93

    +0.07%

  • BP

    0.5100

    42.67

    +1.2%

  • RYCEF

    -0.4000

    16.55

    -2.42%

Melting ice no guarantee of smooth sailing in fabled Arctic crossing: study
Melting ice no guarantee of smooth sailing in fabled Arctic crossing: study / Photo: Clement Sabourin - AFP

Melting ice no guarantee of smooth sailing in fabled Arctic crossing: study

Melting sea ice in the fast-warming Arctic Ocean is not making it easier for sailors to navigate a legendary shortcut between Europe and Asia despite popular belief, scientists said Thursday.

Text size:

To the contrary, climate change was causing thicker, more hazardous ice to choke the fabled "northwest passage" long-sought by navigators seeking a faster route from the Pacific to the Atlantic Oceans.

Considered virtually impassable a century ago, a growing number of ships have been sailing this remote seaway north of Canada as the thawing of the polar ice promised new opportunities for trade and exploration.

Cargo ships, fishing boats, racing craft and even a large, 1,000-passenger cruise liner were among the vessels to make the once-unthinkable voyage in recent years.

But a new study challenges "the increasingly common belief" that the northwest passage could become a viable alternative shipping route as warming temperatures cause an overall decline in Arctic sea ice.

"We found almost the opposite of what people were assuming," the study's lead author Alison Cook, an expert on polar shipping at the Scottish Association for Marine Science, told AFP.

Far from opening up, Cook and colleagues found that the shipping season in the northwest passage -- the number of weeks per year that a vessel can safely navigate -- actually shortened between 2007 and 2021.

This was the result of an increase in older, thicker ice from the melting polar cap drifting southward into the passage, where it reinforced choke points and impeded navigation.

This ice posed a greater risk to ships than the younger, thinner ice more common in the Canadian archipelago, said the study published in the journal Communications Earth and Environment.

- Storied route -

Explorers dreamt for centuries of discovering a northwest passage through the Arctic.

In one of the Arctic's great mysteries, British explorer Sir John Franklin led a storied expedition to chart the course in 1845 that cost two ships and the lives of all aboard.

In 1906, Roald Amundsen became the first European to sail its icy distance.

The journey saves ships approximately 7,000 kilometres (4,300 miles) of distance between Europe and Asia.

As sea ice has considerably declined in the Arctic, the prospect of reshaping global trade flows has renewed geopolitical and economic interest in the storied route.

But the lack of infrastructure, its remoteness, and maze-like shoals and straits make navigation perilous.

The study said that as sea ice has declined, the number of voyages across the entire Canadian Arctic had quadrupled since 1990.

Journeys through the northwest passage have grown too, but remain very low.

Ships entering its straits increased from 112 in 2013 to 160 in 2019, according to the Arctic Council, an intergovernmental organisation for the region.

This could change as the planet further warms.

A 2021 peer-reviewed study forecast that the northwest passage would be navigable for at least part of the year if global temperatures rose 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels.

This latest study did not offer future projections but Cook said the older, thicker ice accumulating in the passage would be there "for quite some time, many years into the future".

"It's more like giving a warning," she said of their findings, "or making people aware (to be) careful still, because it's not opening up anytime soon."

(P.Werner--BBZ)