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Reuters
20 April, 2016, 20:06
Update: 20 April, 2016, 20:06
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China wants ships to use faster Arctic route opened by global warming

Reuters
20 April, 2016, 20:06
Update: 20 April, 2016, 20:06
In this 27 September 2015 photo, an aerial view of the CCGS Amundsen, a Canadian research ice-breaker navigating near an ice floe along Devon Island, in the Canadian High Arctic. CCGS Amundsen is navigating waters that should be frozen over this time of year. Warming has forced a retreat of the polar ice cap, opening up a sea route through the Canadian Arctic Archipelago and connecting the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans for several months of the year. Photo: AFP

Beijing: China will encourage ships flying its flag to take the Northwest Passage via the Arctic Ocean, a route opened up by global warming, to cut travel times between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, a state-run newspaper said on Wednesday.

China is increasingly active in the polar region, becoming one of the biggest mining investors in Greenland and agreeing a free trade deal with Iceland. In 2013, the Arctic Council admitted emerging powers China and India as observers.

Shorter shipping routes across the Arctic Ocean would save Chinese companies time and money. For example, the journey from Shanghai to Hamburg via the Arctic route is 2,800 nautical miles shorter than going by the Suez canal.

China’s Maritime Safety Administration this month released a 356-page guide in Chinese offering detailed route guidance from the northern coast of North America to the northern Pacific, the China Daily said.

‘Once this route is commonly used, it will directly change global maritime transport and have a profound influence on international trade, the world economy, capital flow and resource exploitation,’ ministry spokesman Liu Pengfei was quoted as saying.

Chinese ships will sail through the Northwest Passage ‘in the future’, Liu added, without giving a timeframe.

Asked if China considered the Northwest Passage an international waterway or Canadian waters, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said China had noted that Canada considered it to cross its waters, although some countries believed it was open to international navigation.

‘China has also noted that Canada has taken some management and control steps in the Northwest Passage, including that foreign ships before entering or crossing its exclusive economic zone and territorial waters report to and obtain Canada’s permission,’ she told a daily news briefing.

The route would also be strategically important to China, another maritime official, Wu Yuxiao, told the China Daily.

‘Many countries have noticed the financial and strategic value of Arctic Ocean passages. China has also paid much attention,’ Wu said.

He pointed to risks, such as lack of infrastructure and possible damage by ice and unpredictable weather.

‘As sea ice has declined due to global warming, Arctic navigation has increasing possibilities. That’s why we need guidance for ships with the Chinese flag.’

Melting sea ice has spurred more commercial traffic and China has sought to become more active in the Arctic, where it has said it has important interests.

Chinese ships, even merchant vessels, using the Northwest Passage could raise eyebrows in Washington.

In September, five Chinese Navy ships sailed in international waters in the Bering Sea off Alaska, in an apparent first for China’s military at a time when US President Barack Obama toured the US state. 

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