Iceland review - 2014, Side 40

Iceland review - 2014, Side 40
38 ICELAND REVIEW When I was born, in the early 70s, the world’s population stood at three billion. When I retire, around the year 2040, the population will have tripled to nine billion. Never before has the human race experi- enced such an explosion in growth. This calls for more energy, more food and more water to fulfill our basic needs. THE ArcTIc cOuNcIl There are eight countries in the Arctic Council: Iceland, Greenland (Denmark), Canada, the U.S., Russia, Finland, Sweden and Norway. The Arctic is governed by those countries since they have economic rights in accordance with UNCLOS, the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea. UNCLOS gives countries rights according to the extent of their continental shelves. In the case of the Arctic, the shelves of Russia, tion of goods between England and Scotland, pointing out that by means of shipping, 15 times the load can be transported at the same price as moving the goods on a carriage. Still today, shipping is by far the cheapest form of transport. Smith understood that transport is the foundation for business, and that spe- cialization is the way to reach higher living standards. Currently, the Arctic’s infrastructure is quite limited. In order to harvest resources, it is essential to have access to ports, airports, electricity and the like. Instead of build- ing infrastructure around every project, it would be more efficient to work on different opportunities from a single base. Iceland served as that base in the past. It was a center for commerce and transport in the Arctic until 1264 when it gave up its sov- ereignty to the king of Norway. After that, Iceland lost its position and Norway took it over, and then eventually Denmark, which held a monopoly on trade in Greenland, Iceland, the Faroe Islands and Svalbard well into the 20th century. The Danish Kingdom protected their interests fiercely, positioning its navy in the area to fend off any intruders, who at the time were mostly Dutch whalers. Iceland experienced its darkest hour dur- ing those centuries and the living standard collapsed. It was only in 1913, once Iceland started its own shipping company, Eimskip, that our luck started turning. Much of the debate regarding the Arctic has focused on the Northern Sea Route and oil and gas exploration. Unfortunately other projects, much closer in time, have gone unnoticed. OPPOrTuNITIES IN grEENlAND Greenland is now in a similar position as Iceland was in 1918, when Iceland had home rule but had not yet declared independence. Canada, the U.S., Greenland and Norway more or less cover the entire area. That is very different from the Antarctic. The South Pole has no continental shelf of any country close by and is therefore an international territory. The Antarctic treaty governs the continent. With technological advances, the harvest- ing of resources is becoming more and more attractive in and around the North and South Poles. As the Arctic is not an international territory, the Arctic Council has a big say in regarding how the development occurs. TrANSPOrT IS kEy Eighteenth century pioneer of political econ- omy Adam Smith understood that transport was the key to economic development. In the third chapter of his magnum opus Wealth of Nations (1776) he discusses the transporta- fRONTIER the farm nýhöfn on Melrakkaslétta, iceland's northernmost peninsula.

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