http://www.spacedaily.com/news/iceage-05b.html


Global warming may augur future environmental misery for some, but it
is good news for entrepreneurs poised to cash in on the melting polar
ice cap to forge a new Canada-Russia trade route.
Russian crude oil destined for the gas guzzling United States could
soon be shipped through a passage between Churchill, 1,000 kilometres
(620 miles) north of the US-Canada border and Murmansk in Russia's far
north on the Barents Sea.

Churchill, on the western shore of the Hudson Bay, is cut off from
Murmansk by a vast tract of ice which blocks off routes between chains
of islands for much of the year, but warming temperatures on the roof
of the world are allowing ships to navigate for longer periods
annually.

Last year, the city's port, an isolated spot braved by only polar
bears and about 1,000 residents, and tourists drawn by the haunting
beauty of the aurora borealis, was open from July to November.

By mid-century, scientists predict waterways could remain ice-free
year round, cutting more than 2,000 kilometres (1,240 miles) off trips
to northern Europe or Russia.

A delegation is currently in Russia to discuss plans for the new trade
route, led by Denver, Colorado-based Omnitrax, which owns the port in
Churchill, to meet private and public sector officials.

"We're very excited. There is great potential for increasing trade
between North America and the Russian sphere," said Mike Ogborn, who
is spearheading the port's ambitious expansion plan.

Currently, only a small amount of Canadian grain is shipped through
Churchill.

Most traffic goes instead through the ports of Vancouver in western
Canada and Montreal in the east, where larger populations wield more
clout and shipping routes are clear.

The US group Omnitrax, hoping to welcome ships of over 40,000 tonnes,
has dredged the harbor in Churchill and reinforced the connecting rail
bed to support heavier loads.

Soon, it hopes to more than double the volume and variety of
commodities shipped through the port including phosphates, ores,
petroleum products, fertilizer and agricultural machinery.

The first shipment, if negotiations go well, will set sail later his
year.

The so-called arctic bridge has won support from the Canadian
government and local administrations, as well as the new Russian
ambassador to Canada Georgiy Mamedov.

A fleet of 10 Russian icebreakers and ice-resistant cargo ships could
be deployed to keep the route open an extra month, the ambassador has
suggested.

He even argued, quite seriously, that Russia's massive decommissioned
nuclear submarines could be used for polar commerce, transporting
goods in compartments that once housed missiles.

"Some of them are quite huge, designed to carry missiles. Instead of
turning them into heaps of metal, they could be used to transport
nickel or other goods. This is conversion for you," Mamedov told AFP.

But, there is a downside for Canada too. Northern aboriginal
populations have reported adverse effects on traditional hunting in an
increasingly unfamiliar landscape with unpredictable weather patterns.



xponent

Black Ice Maru

rob


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