Northwest Passage redux


Originally published 12:38 a.m., June 12, 2005, updated 12:00 a.m., June 12, 2005

RESOLUTE BAY, Canada - Steadily melting Arctic ice is not just exposing vast unexplored fishing stocks and mineral wealth. It's also rapidly making the Northwest Passage -- the passable sea route sought by Henry Hudson and other explorers of the 16th and 17th centuries -- fully navigable in the summer.

That, in turn, is forcing Canada to confront a range of sovereignty issues, including disputes with the United States and other Arctic neighbors.

Canada considers the Northwest Passage its internal waters, but the United States insists it is an international strait.

"The heart of the dispute is the transit of international shipping, and who gets to set rules," says Rob Huebert, associate director of the Center for Military and Strategic Studies at the University of Calgary in Alberta.

An open Northwest Passage would cut 5,000 nautical miles from shipping routes between Europe and Asia.

If the passage's deep waters become completely ice-free in summer months, they would be particularly enticing for massive supertankers that are forced to plow around the tip of South America because they are too big to pass through the Panama Canal.

The search for the Northwest Passage became an obsession for European explorers once it became clear that the vast continents of North and South America stood between Europe and the Orient.

One of the most famous explorers, Henry Hudson, made four unsuccessful attempts to find a sea route to China in the early 17th century -- one up the Hudson River and three through Arctic waters. Hudson's career ended when a mutinous crew set him adrift in a rowboat somewhere in the Hudson Bay and returned to England.

It took nearly three centuries before Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen, known as "the last of the Vikings," became the first to make it through the entire length of the passage. He did it with a 70-foot fishing boat in 1903.

According the Canadian Ice Service, the amount of ice in Canada's eastern Arctic Archipelago decreased by 15 percent between 1969 and 2004. In parts of the Western Arctic, the ice has receded by 36 percent.

TIMES NETWORK

Twitter | MySpace | Facebook

You Report

Do you have another point of view, photos, audio, video or more information about a story?

Advertisement

Advertisement

Don Lambro and Ralph Hallow discuss the days news.; politics; washington dc; washington times; Iraq's Ambassador to the United States, Samir Sumaida'ie, discusses Iraqi stability during a visit to The Washington Times Tuesday, May 6, 2008.; Ambassador; Iraq; War; community-technology-lifestyle; iran; Thousands greet Pope Benedict XVI as he drives through Washington, D.C., on April 16, 2008.; Benedict XVI; pope; washington dc; A Washington, D.C.-based cab driver recovered from a traumatic time in his life thanks to the power of music.; cab; karaoke; taxi; washington dc; Iraq's Ambassador to the United States, Samir Sumaida'ie, discusses Iran during a visit to The Washington Times Tuesday, May 6, 2008.; Ambassador; Iraq; War; iran; Iraq's Ambassador to the United States, Samir Sumaida'ie, discusses using oil proceeds to pay for reconstruction.; Ambassador; Iraq; War; iran; oil; reconstruction; Iraq's Ambassador to the United States, Samir Sumaida'ie, discusses politics a visit to The Washington Times Tuesday, May 6, 2008.; Ambassador; Iraq; War; iran; oil; presidential primaries; The Robotopia Rising exhibit is part of the Kennedy Center's "Japan! Culture + Hyper Culture" festival. ; The Newseum, which bills itself as the world's most interactive museum, will open its new $450 million, seven-level museum on historic Pennsylvania Avenue on Friday, April 11. Take a sneak peek inside; DO NOT DELETE. I this player that shows on all article detail pages.

Inside the Story with Rick Amato, Sept. 3 (Part 1)

GO >

Palin Challenges Washington Elite

Her prime-time moment arrived, Republican presump

What did you think of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's speech last night at the Republican National Convention?

Paul Alexander, author of "Man of the People: The Life ...

GO >
  • Imagine being 10 years old and not getting to celebrate your birthday with your parents and beloved siblings. Dashya (pronounced D-shy-a), 10, of Baltimore doesn't have to imagine.

  • U.S. forces attacked suspected al Qaeda targets in Pakistan on Wednesday as part of an aggressive new strategy to kill or capture Osama bin Laden before President Bush leaves office.

  • A few years ago, if asked his potential objectives for Labor Day 2008, devising a game plan to beat the defending Super Bowl champions, worrying about the health of his best pass rusher and supervising a staff of five coaches would have been way down on Greg Blache's list.

  • Some may wonder why I am in St. Paul but was not in Denver. After all, this is a historic moment in our nation's history with an African-American having been nominated for president by a major party for the first time in our history. As an African American from the South I applaud this moment. Sen. Barack Obama has broken through great barriers. He has displayed significant political skills, determination and guile. His success speaks volumes about the America that exists today.

  • Lululemon Athletica might be located among stores, but it doesn't consider itself one of them. A store can sell jeans or cosmetics or sweaters; Lululemon is a lifestyle.

  • Even a weaker-than-expected Hurricane Gustav is thought to have wreaked billions of dollars in damage, leaving the Gulf Coast in significant need of charitable aid despite not matching the level of destruction of Katrina.

  • Maryland coach Ralph Friedgen promised this week quarterback Jordan Steffy would come in and win a game for the Terrapins at some juncture this season.

  • NATO guarantees that an attack against one member country is an attack against all are no longer what they used to be. Had Georgia been inside NATO, a number of European countries would no longer be willing to consider it an attack against their own soil.

What did you think of Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's speech last night at the Republican National Convention?