Introduction
For decades, global conflicts were centred in the Middle East and Europe. But now a new strategic competition is emerging in a region once considered isolated and unimportant — the Arctic. Melting ice due to climate change is opening sea routes, exposing vast natural resources, and attracting major powers like the USA, Russia, and China. This has transformed the Arctic into a new arena of geopolitical rivalry.
What is the Arctic?
The Arctic is the region around the North Pole, consisting mainly of the Arctic Ocean surrounded by:
Russia
United States (Alaska)
Canada
Norway
Denmark (via Greenland)
Iceland (near-Arctic state)
Why is the Arctic Suddenly Important?
1. Melting Ice → New Sea Routes
Due to global warming, sea ice is melting faster.
Two major shipping routes are emerging:
Northern Sea Route (Russia)
Northwest Passage (Canada)
These routes can reduce travel time between Europe and Asia by 30–40% compared to the Suez Canal route.
Example:
Shanghai → Rotterdam
Suez route: ~20,000 km
Arctic route: ~13,000 km
This means cheaper trade and faster shipping.
2. Massive Natural Resources
The Arctic holds enormous untapped resources:
~13% of world’s undiscovered oil
~30% of undiscovered natural gas
Rare earth minerals
Fisheries
This is why countries are rushing to claim the seabed under international law.
Military Competition (The Real Issue)



Russia
Largest Arctic coastline
Reopened Soviet-era bases
Deploying missile systems
Controls Northern Sea Route
United States
Increasing naval patrols
Strengthening Alaska bases
Working with NATO allies
China
Calls itself a “Near-Arctic State”
Investing in polar research stations
Wants a Polar Silk Road (extension of Belt and Road Initiative)
This is why experts call it “The New Cold War Zone.”
Environmental Concerns
The Arctic is extremely fragile.
Risks:
Oil spills
Biodiversity loss
Melting permafrost releasing methane
Rising sea levels worldwide
Whatever happens in the Arctic affects global climate — including India’s monsoon patterns.
Why It Matters for India
India is not an Arctic country, but still involved:
India has an Arctic research station Himadri (Norway’s Svalbard)
Monsoon is linked to Arctic warming
Trade routes may reduce shipping cost to Europe
Energy security (LNG opportunities)
Conclusion
The Arctic is no longer a frozen desert. It is becoming a strategic, economic, and military hotspot. Climate change has unintentionally opened a new theatre of global competition. The future balance of power, global trade routes, and even climate stability may depend on what happens in this icy region.
UPSC Prelims Pointers
Arctic Council formed in 1996
Members: 8 countries (USA, Russia, Canada, Norway, Denmark, Finland, Sweden, Iceland)
No military alliance — only cooperation forum
India is an Observer State
UPSC Mains Practice Question
“The Arctic is emerging as a new geopolitical hotspot in the 21st century.” Discuss the strategic, economic and environmental dimensions. (250 words)