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The Arctic: A New Information Superhighway?

© Sputnik / Vladimir Baranov / Go to the mediabankCoastline of the Franz Josef Land archipelago.
Coastline of the Franz Josef Land archipelago. - Sputnik International
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While the shrinkage of Arctic ice is indeed an environmental catastrophe, Arctic countries may still get an unexpected "silver lining" in the form of extensive fiber optic cable coverage that would give northerners better internet access and give a major boost to local job markets.

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Today, the World Wide Web is supported by a network of crisscrossing cables along the ocean floor. Due to the melting ice in the Arctic, ships used to install the cables can now navigate the Northeast Passage connecting the Atlantic and Pacific oceans.

For many Arctic countries, a new fiber optic cable linking Europe and Asia may be a top priority with many benefits. In December 2016, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev discussed perspectives for a coming infrastructural boost to the Arctic with his Finnish counterpart Juha Sipilä.

A previous 2016 report by former Finnish Prime Minister Paavo Lipponen identified Russia, China, Japan and Norway as key countries for the ambitious cable-laying project, which was deemed "politically and technologically viable."

According to Lipponen's vision, the undersea section of the cable would stretch around 10,500 kilometers from Japan and China to the Kola Peninsula in Russia and Kirkenes, Norway. From there, it would cross into Finnish Lapland and further south to Central Europe via the Baltic fiber cable connection between Helsinki and Rostock, Germany. In addition to providing speed, the cable would also respond to the rapidly increasing need for capacity and would provide a reliable alternative to the risky southern routes, the report found, suggesting it to be given strong preference during the Finnish chairmanship of the Arctic Council in 2017.

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The fiber optic cable is a golden opportunity even for Norway. Bernt Nilsen, Director of the Norwegian branch of the International Computer Driving License Foundation (ECDL), told the Kirkenes-based Arctic magazine Barents Observer about the prospects of Kirkenes, currently a border town of 3,500 inhabitants, becoming an international node for the telecommunication traffic.

"With a cold climate, renewable hydropower and possibilities for locations in old mining mountain halls, all infrastructure is here. The only thing we lack is a high-capacity fiber cable," Bernt Nilsen said, calling on the Norwegian authorities to take an active part in the project as soon as it takes shape.

Norway, which previously laid fiber cables to provide some 2,100 residents of Longyearbyen on the Arctic archipelago of Svalbard with some of the world's most advanced digital services, has valuable experience to share.

​Even Sweden regards the possibilities of a new digital highway in the Artic as a major jumping-off place. In recent years, the northern Swedish city of Luleå has become a major node for data centers across Europe. Since 2013, when Facebook opened a giant 30,000 square meter data center, Luleå and its neighborhood has been experiencing a business boom that has already led to a spike in real estate prices and an infrastructural push.

Luleå. #luleå #sverige #sweden #norrbotten

Публикация от Reino Jillker (@jillker) Мар 5 2017 в 12:05 PST

"[The northern region of] Norrbotten can become part of a global, international, communication center. That's what we want to achieve. This creates more jobs and new opportunities," Tony Blomqvist, CEO of IT Norrbotten, told Swedish Radio.

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The Northeast Passage is an Arctic Ocean shipping route connecting the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, traversing the Arctic largely following Russia's coast.

Incidentally, the same ideas abound on the other side of the Northern Pole. Quintillion Networks, an Alaska-based communications operator, is planning a 10,000-mile fiber cable that will run from Japan to Great Britain through the Northwest Passage, a major waterway along Canada's northwest coast that has hitherto been clogged with ice yet is becoming increasingly ice-free.

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