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    Arctic ice melt lifts hopes for Russian maritime trade

    SEVERODVINSK, Russia (Reuters) - When severe snowstorms prevented life-sustaining fuel supplies from reaching the frozen Alaskan town of Nome, U.S. officials turned to a Russian company for help.

    The relief mission through perilous, ice-choked seas was the first mid-winter fuel delivery to western Alaska, capping a year of pioneering shipping as oil and gas development and climate change increase traffic along northern trade routes sought by centuries of Arctic explorers.

    Russia has staked future growth on mining the Arctic's vast energy resources, and reviving a Soviet-era shipping route along its Siberia coast is an integral part of that plan. It could also promise economic revival for Russia's ports and shipyards, struggling since their Soviet-era glory days.

    But industry analysts and mariners say ice floes, narrow straits, shallow waters, poor infrastructure and stormy winters continue to loom as obstacles to safe and profitable shipping through the polar shortcut.

    "We must develop the Arctic!" said Fazil Aliyev, a sea captain and owner of the tanker that voyaged to Alaska.

    "It is profitable for everyone. Our clients win because their cargo is delivered faster, now we need to make it economically viable... try to make it a year-round route," he said, speaking by phone from Vladivostok, Russia's gateway port to Asian markets.

    Aliyev's company, RIMSCO, tripled cargo along Russia's coastal waterway last year when a warm summer kept what Russia calls the Northern Sea Route open for a record 141 days, almost a month longer than usual.

    Sometimes called the Northeast Passage, the circumpolar route is a network of sea lanes across the top of continental Eurasia which crosses Russian waters from the Kara Gate to the Bering Strait and trims some 4,000 nautical miles off southern routes.

    Danish shipping group Nordic Bulk Carriers said it saved a third of the cost and nearly half the time sending goods to China sailing north of Russia instead of via the Suez canal.

    "It's a very promising region and an interesting shipping lane that almost halves the distance between Europe and the Far East," Aliyev said.

    TOUGH TIMES AT THE SHIPYARD

    In the White Sea port of Severodvinsk, once a closed city of 200,000 at the heart of the Soviet Union's Cold War nuclear submarine program, defense contracts won by the shipyard and tested at a nearby naval base still pay the bulk of wages.

    Big black submarines lumbered out to sea from its docks in ice-free waters without the help of tugboats or icebreakers unusually late into the fall last year.

    Built in the 1930s, the state-owned Sevmash shipyard 35 km (22 miles) north of the city of Arkhangelsk, is a jumble of buildings and factory floors big enough to be a town itself, with canteens, churches and a museum for its 27,000 employees.

    The shipyard saw tough times in the 1990s as Moscow slashed defense spending, and Russia's share of the global shipbuilding market dwindled to just 0.2 percent. China and South Korea now dominate, with 37 and 35 percent of the market, respectively.

    Yelena Makhovetskaya, 27, a graduate of Sevmash's shipbuilding university, said salaries were among the highest in the Soviet Union when her parents moved here in the 1970s. Wages have since fallen against the national average, many people have left and fewer are coming to work in the region, she said.

    But new state contracts are fueling a revival. The sector was one of the few to see growth in crisis-hit 2009, with output up 62 percent and another 8 percent in 2010.

    Sevmash's director, Andrei Dyachkov, said the shipyard hopes to profit from its know-how in the Arctic to win orders to build offshore drilling platforms, ice-capable support ships and even a floating airstrip to service oil fields in the Pechora Sea.

    A race to exploit energy riches in the Arctic sea floor -- believed to hold as much as one quarter of the earth's untapped hydrocarbons -- has already brought new contracts.

    Under an order from state energy firm Gazprom, Sevmash completed Russia's first ice-resistant offshore production platform, which was tugged out to the Pechora Sea in August to drill at the oil-steeped Prirazlomnoye field.

    QUICK AND PIRATE-FREE

    Russia has long hauled cargoes of oil, iron ore and fish products across its sprawling northern coast, but until 2009 no foreign-flagged merchant vessel had plied the trade link.

    When fast-rising temperatures melted Arctic ice cover to its second-smallest recorded area in 2011, a record 34 barges -- more than double 2010 and including supertankers -- piloted the icy seas.

    Russian shipping giant Sovkomflot plied the coastal waterway with the biggest ship ever, a Suezmax-class tanker loaded with 120,000 tons of gas condensate, while a vessel owned by Scorpio Tanker Inc. sailed from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean in a record eight days.

    Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has cast it as a quicker and pirate-free rival to the Suez Canal.

    "I have no doubt this is just the beginning," Putin said of the voyages at an international Arctic forum in September.

    With its eye on the billions of dollars earned by Egypt's waterway, Moscow hopes transit tolls and fees from the compulsory lease of one of its atomic-icebreaker escort ships will help fund its own costly infrastructure needs in the Arctic.

    Most of Russia's 5,500-km (3,420-mile) Arctic-facing coast is uninhabited, lacking refueling stations, navigational infrastructure and coast guards to help stranded seafarers.

    Its unrivaled fleet of nuclear icebreakers is a financial drain whether or not they are in use since the reactors need to remain constantly on, Arild Moe, deputy head of Norway's Fridtjof Nansen Institute, told Reuters.

    "The waterway is considered an important part of national transport infrastructure, as well as a manifestation of Russian interests in the Arctic," Moe said. "The crucial issue is financing."

    The Kremlin plans to spend $1.2 billion through 2014 on its ice-class fleet and build three atomic-powered and six diesel-electric icebreakers by 2020.

    Dyachkov described winning these tenders as a potential game changer.

    "It would confirm Sevmash as the centre for atomic shipbuilding in Russia," he told Reuters.

    HAZARDOUS WATERS, FIERCE STORMS

    One of the biggest barriers will continue to be the region's formidable winters.

    Ice floes, heavy fog and violent storms like those that have hit Alaska this month increase the environmental and safety risks -- driving up liability insurance rates.

    There is little economic incentive today for shipowners to order the more expensive ice-capable tankers, said Erik Nikolai Stavseth, an analyst at Norway-based Arctic Securities.

    "I don't think standard vessels will be out-competed yet -- for the next five-ten years," Stavseth said. "We are going to see more pioneering and more exploratory shipping, but I would not bank on the Northern Sea Route becoming a standard route."

    Some scientists say rising temperatures could make sailing the Arctic waters more hazardous -- not easier -- in the near future, bringing more icebergs and fiercer storms.

    "This could be a real problem for offshore platforms and tankers," said Genrikh Alexeyev, an expert on the interaction of the ice, ocean and atmosphere at Russia's Arctic and Antarctic Institute.

    The dangers of plying the Arctic seas were spotlighted when a drilling rig with 67 crew capsized and sank off Russia's far eastern island of Sakhalin in a storm last month, killing 53.

    Experts say a leak even a fraction of the size of BP's disaster in the Gulf of Mexico could be devastating in frozen seas -- halting dreams of Arctic transformation in their tracks.

    "Ice, like a blotter, easily absorbs oil products, and oil stuck to ice can spread colossal distances," said Inna Nemirovskaya, head of the P. P. Shirshova Institute of Oceanology at the Russian Academy of Science.

    But Russia is playing a long game in the Arctic.

    "For Russia, development of Arctic resources is a vital interest. It is the key to maintaining and increasing gas exports," said Charles Emmerson, author of "The Future History of the Arctic."

    "We are witnessing the first of a five-act play."

    If and when climate change opens up the Arctic to year-round bulk shipping, Russia had a head start, Aliyev said.

    "We've learned in the most extreme weather, so that when it gets easier there won't be anything to be scared of," he said.

    (Additional reporting by Gleb Bryanski; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)

    What do you feel about this article?

     

    85 comments

    • Bernard  •  Dallas, United States  •  27 days ago
      The only constant in nature is that there will be cycles. The future for that region is that some winters will be mild and others will be severe. Basically, those who are planning a forever passage up there are like weather prognosticators. Only fools and liars predict the weather!
    • WATCHEM  •  San Diego, United States  •  28 days ago
      See, there is an upside to every event.
    • Ricky  •  Lubbock, United States  •  27 days ago
      So, when will Holland America start offering Northwest Passage cruise packages?
    • Ian  •  Astoria, United States  •  27 days ago
      If I lived and worked along the Siberian Arctic coast, I would want to believe in global warning.
    • Joel  •  29 days ago
      How should we fill the empty spaces?
    • wake up!  •  Cypress, United States  •  27 days ago
      Those who fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it. The "fabled" Northwest Passage was OPEN in the past, and was sailed through in 1906 by Amundsen and again TWICE by the 106 ft. WOODEN St. Roch once east to west from 1940 - 1942 (took 2 years due to a lack of accurate mapping) and AGAIN from west to east in 1944 (in 86 days).
      Note the time difference. About 30 years, the warm and cold cycle of the ocean currents, known as the PDO and AMO. The passage has been sailed many times since Amundsen. Now since we weren't here back in the MWP, how do we know it wasn't open then? AGW supporters are jumping on a temporary (in climate terms) warming trend, with "faith" as their only "reality".
    • Jeffrey  •  Corpus Christi, United States  •  27 days ago
      build a big pathway for the ships to go in that block the waves...use the oil revenues to pay for it...
    • Richard Blaine  •  27 days ago
      It's the Northwest Passage - sort of. Europeans like Henry Hudson were looking for this 400 years ago. They just had to melt a little (lot) of ice.
    • Robert  •  La Mirada, United States  •  27 days ago
      Another thought would be to build a rail link between the Bering strait. This would connect Asia with North America. Shiping via train, goods can ship back and forth more economicly.
    • Sikovitt  •  26 days ago
      Better do an environmental impact study to see if it will harm the dead expanses of empty ice and water. Save the snowmen!
    • Frankie  •  Arcadia, United States  •  26 days ago
      Northwest Passage has been voyageur's dream for centuries;now with Russian effort to open up thiis dream shorcut with nuclear power icebreakers it will become a reality in not long distance.But fragile ecosystem and treacherous route merits more careful planning and rigorous enforcement of oceanographic safety laws to presever its prestine enviroment.
    • Pio  •  New York, United States  •  26 days ago
      Alaska... $10 for gallon of milk... yeah..
    • m  •  26 days ago
      Ha, sounds like perfect way to avoid payment huge fees to greedy Arab scams for the use their Suez Canal Passage.
    • Scootter  •  Troy, United States  •  27 days ago
      My kingdome for a blogger with an education not one with just enough knowledge to be dangerous. If the truth were valued more by the masses most of the blogs would turn to fog and drift away.
    • Bill  •  28 days ago
      Why would anyone even want to live where it snows that much anyway?
    • Sikovitt  •  26 days ago
      Feb. 21, 2015-"Russian cargo ship taken by eskimo pirates"
    • 2000jakes  •  Los Angeles, United States  •  26 days ago
      Not an issue for the USA because of our position, we have direct routes Atlantic or Pacific.
    • wake up!  •  Cypress, United States  •  29 days ago
      We are nearing the peak of this very weak sunspot cycle, so when we go into the next minimum, we're going to see much more arctic ice. The arctic going "ice free" is a pipe dream of the AGW crowd. It won't happen. Arctic ice in the Bering Sea is well above "normal" (whatever that is...only 33 years of satellite data) due to the PDO turning cold. The AMO turned warm in '95-'96 which explains the below "normal" sea ice in the north Atlantic. It's all about cycles, and we will soon return to a cold cycle.
    • gadfly05  •  29 days ago
      Global Warming - shorter trade routes, tens of thousands of square miles of new agricultural land, lots of new waterfront housing, places like Minnesota get the climate of Hilton Head, and Florida, New Orleans, and Los Angeles wind up under water. So where's the down side?
    • MC  •  Saginaw, United States  •  27 days ago
      The rest of the world is forging ahead while enviromental fruitcakes force the US people into poverty and hunger.
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