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RIAC FORECAST 2019–2024: ARCTIC 2024

Analytical digest
5 April 2019
Climate forecasts for the Arctic suggest that shipping volumes for the Northern Sea Route in the medium term will hardly exceed current values. By 2030 the navigation period is expected to last for up to nine weeks a year with the maximum concentration of ice in water of 10%, and for another five weeks before and after the main navigation period with the concentration of up to 40%. In the «western» Arctic seas (Barents Sea and Norwegian Sea) the navigation conditions are more favorable even now. In other Arctic seas (Laptev Sea, East Siberian Sea, Chukchi Sea, Baffin Bay, Greenland Sea) the climatic conditions in the foreseeable future will stay harsh.

The political and military situation in the Arctic will remain stable and predictable. However, some circumstances may hinder international cooperation in the region. First and foremost, these circumstances include the issue of defining the limits of the continental shelf in the Arctic Ocean and possible entanglement of the Arctic in the arms race.
It must be noted that the issue of the limits of the continental shelf will hardly be settled in the near future because presentations of the coastal states to the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf take considerable time to be reviewed.

In any case, international cooperation in the Arctic will have to face a test of strength. Due to the specifics of the current political situation, Russia will attach particular importance to the task of preventing the crisis between Russia and the West from having an adverse effect on the Arctic region.

Anlytics on the topic

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Research
30 December 2019
AMAP Assessment 2018: Arctic Ocean Acidification

This report presents the results of the 2018 Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (AMAP) second assessment that deals with ocean acidification from an Arctic-wide perspective and complements several assessments that AMAP has delivered over past years.

Research
20 July 2020
What policies for greening the crisis response and economic recovery? Lessons learned from past green stimulus measures and implications for the COVID-19 crisis

This paper by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) evaluates green stimulus packages that were introduced in response to the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) of 2007-2008 and draws lessons relevant for greening the recovery from the COVID-19 crisis.

Articles
12 February 2020
Neoliberal economic model and social inequality

This report studies the role of neoliberalism in the global economic crisis of 2008 and its impact on the rise of social inequality. The author reviews the background of the crisis and analyzes the current trends and prospects of global economic development.

Articles
15 August 2022
Where Does Our Drinking Water Actually Come From in the US?

Did you know that the United States has are more than 155,000 public water systems? With so many different systems, it becomes inevitable to wonder where our drinking water actually comes from and how safe it is. Even though there have been some incidents that have dented the confidence of US residents in the water that comes out of their taps, public water in the US is relatively safe. In 2019, the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator, Andrew Wheeler, noted that 92% of public water systems meet safe water standards.