Interessen for Arktis øker. Da mest i strategisk sammenheng. Det er interessant å merke seg at Erdogan vil smarbeide med russerne fremfor Norge. Jeg tipper at presset på Svalbardtraktaten vil øke, og russerne er kjente for å lage egne definisjoner av internasjonale overenskomster, og ikke minst lage sine egne regler. Det samme gjelder forøvrig Kina. (Red.)
Pyramiden was for more than 20 years a ghost town. In
recent time, Russia has moved in workers to resurrect the Soviet-style
buildings and upgrade infrastructure. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Turkish science team explores Russia’s
Svalbard plans
Infrastructure, logistics and life were
on the agenda when a Turkish research delegation came to Pyramiden, the ghost
town Russia wants to turn into an international Arctic science hub. The move
comes only three months after Ankara ratified the Svalbard Treaty.
By
Thomas Nilsen
July 23, 2024
The 11-member team from the TÜBİTAK MAM Polar Research
Institute came to Pyramiden on July 21.
They arrived “to study the potential of the town as part
of the creation of an international scientific and education centre,” Trust
Aktikugol writes on Vkontakte.
Turkey is one of the nations that this year have
reached out to the BRICS club of major emerging nations in a bid to join.
Russia, currently holding the BRICS leadership, has
long been enthusiastic about inviting what Moscow defines as “friendly
countries” to team up for a new Arctic science centre aimed to resurrect the ghost town of Pyramiden.
Pyramiden was built by the Soviet Union as an Arctic mining
community on Svalbard. The
last batch of coal was shipped out in 1998.
Arktikugol, the state-own company running all Moscow’s
activities at the Norwegian archipelago, is now looking for new ways to
maintain presence at the geopolitical important spot between east and west in
the Arctic.
“Turkish scientists were shown the technological,
industrial and domestic infrastructure of the Pyramiden village,” Aktikugol
explains.
“During the meeting, issues of logistics on the
Spitsbergen archipelago and the life of scientists in one of the northernmost
settlements on the planet were discussed.”
The TÜBİTAK MAM Polar Research Institute is
currently embarking on its 4th Arctic expedition aimed at studying impacts of
climate changes. Last week, the team sailed into the Arctic sea ice north of
Svalbard.
Turkey officially became a signature country to the Svalbard Treaty on April 11th, 2024. Turkish citizens can
now benefit from the privilege of engaging in the rights provided by the
treaty, like living end engaging in commercial activities.
45 countries have signed the 1920 treaty. Before
Turkey this year, Latvia and North-Korea signed in 2016.
Senior researcher Andreas Østhagen with the Fridtjof
Nansen Institute believes Ankara’s motivation and decision to join the
Svalbard Treaty are driven by great power aspirations and posturing.
“Being seen as part
of the Arctic club is trendy,” Østhagen says to the Barents Observer.
“There are also legitimate research interests in
Turkey, linked to the Arctic. Russia, on the other hand, is interested in
fostering support for its Arctic projects that are increasingly an alternative
to the ‘West’. The Pyramiden project and overtures to BRICS countries is an
example of this,” Andreas Østhagen explains.
The expert with the Fridtjof Nansen Institute says it
is hard to understand, from a science-point-of-view, why Ankara potentially
would choose to establish research in Pyramiden.
“Why Turkey, or any other country, would choose
Pyramiden instead of the already established research infrastructure in
Ny-Ålesund, escapes me. I think if a country other than Russia does that, it is
for political purposes and not scientific,” Østhagen says.
Ny-Ålesund is is the research station on
the northwest coast of Svalbard where the Norwegian state-owned
company Kings Bay facilitates infrastructure for hundreds of international
Arctic researchers and key institutions from countries like China, India, the
Netherlands, Germany, South-Korea, France, and Sweden.
According to Russia’s Arktikugol company, talks will
continue with the Turkish Arctic Science team “in a number of areas” following
this week’s visit to Pyramiden.
First time conducted in 2019, this is the fourth time
the Turkish Arctic Scientific Expedition (TASE) sails the waters around
Svalbard. The expedition, that started in Tromsø, Norway, is sponsored by
the Turkish Presidency and the Ministry of Industry and
Technology and takes place on board the Norwegian-flagged Polar
Xplorer ship.
Turkey has previously had a temporary science base to
study climate changes in Horseshoe Island in Antarctica.
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