BRUSSELS: The Arctic offers new energy
and fishing resources as a result of global warming and new technology, the
European Union said on Thursday.
Melting ice also presented new
navigation possibilities such as a short route to the Pacific Ocean, the EU
executive said.
The rapid recession of sea ice, snow cover and
permafrost were helping to accelerate global warming and the loss from the
Greenland ice sheet would bring a swift rise in sea levels, it said in a
paper.
States should develop a coordinated approach to the Arctic to
ensure the EU was well placed to take advantage and to help minimize the damage
from increased human activity, it said.
The EU should work
particularly with Russia and Norway to facilitate environmentally friendly
energy exploitation.
"The Arctic contains large untapped hydrocarbon
reserves," it said. "Arctic resources could contribute to enhancing the EU's
security of supply concerning energy and raw materials in
general."
The EU must keep its edge in sustainable energy
exploitation and encourage research and innovation to facilitate oil and gas
exploration in harsher climates and deeper waters, while insisting on full
respect for environmental standards, it said.
Melting of sea ice
would open new navigation routes and could considerably shorten sea trips from
Europe to the Pacific as well opening new fishing areas, the paper said.
Explorers had for centuries searched for such a route.
On fisheries,
it called for establishment of a regulatory framework for Arctic high seas not
yet covered by international conservation regimes before new fishing
opportunities arose.
"Until a conservation and management regime is
in place for the areas not yet covered by such a regime, no new fisheries should
commence," it said.
Three EU states -- Denmark through Greenland,
Finland and Sweden -- have Arctic territories, while non-EU states Iceland and
Norway are part of the European Economic Area.
A report released in
September by the European Environment Agency, the World Health Organization and
the European Commission found the minimum surface area of Arctic sea ice was
only half the normal minimum measured in the 1950s.
It said the sea
level rise could place 4 million Europeans at risk of flooding by 2100 along
with 2tn euros ($2.9tn) of assets, from London to Athens.