Canada files submission to establish continental shelf’s outer limits in Arctic Ocean

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Canada filed its Arctic continental shelf submission with the U.N. Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf on Wednesday, claiming approximately 1.2 million square kilometres of the Arctic Ocean seabed and subsoil in an area that includes the North Pole.  “Canada is committed to furthering its leadership in the Arctic," said Chrystia Freeland, Canada's minister of foreign affairs, in a news release on Wednesday.  "Defining our continental shelf is vital to ensuring our sovereignty and to serving the interests of all people, including Indigenous peoples, in the Arctic."  The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) gives coastal states a 200 nautical mile continental shelf claim that allows countries the right to exploit resources in the seabed and subsoil of their respective areas.  The activities could be anything from deep seabed mining and fishing, to oil and gas exploration. Canada has been working on gathering data to support its claims in the Arctic and Atlantic Oceans since 2003. "We are proud to support Canada’s Arctic Ocean submission to the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf, supported by science and evidence, reaffirming our government’s commitment to furthering Canada’s leadership in the Arctic,”  Amarjeet Sohi, Canada's minister of Natural Resources, said in the news release. Overlapping claims But UNCLOS allows continental shelves to be extended if a state has scientific data to prove that particular underwater geological or geographical features are actually extensions of their continental shelves. The Lomonosov Ridge is a kind of underwater mountain chain that extends across the seafloor of the Arctic Ocean and is something that Canada, Russia and Denmark all claim is an extension of their respective continental shelves. A map from Canada's UNCLOS submission showing the Lomonosov Ridge. (Government of Canada) Russia was first to make a claim in the area, stopping just short of the North Pole, in 2001. Denmark submitted its submission concerning the Lomonosov Ridge in 2014. The commission rules on the validity of the science submitted by countries, which then becomes the basis for  subsequent political discussions over jurisdiction. Adam Lajeunesse, the Irving Chair at the Mulroney Institute of Government at St. Francis Xavier University in Nova Scotia, Canada, and a Research Fellow at the Canadian Global Affairs Institute, says Canada's claim contained few surprises.  "There was (some conjecture) that we would sort of do a quid pro quo and stop our claim at about the pole as a means of facilitating a political settlement ultimately," Lajeunesse said in a phone interview with Eye on the Arctic. "But like the Danes, we’ve gone well over the North Pole and are claiming an enormous chunk of the Arctic continental shelf now." The commission has already ruled that the geology data put for forth in Russia's claim looks sound, but it could rule the same on Canada's and Denmark's data, says Lajeunesse. "There's a very real chance that all three countries will have put forth claims based on good scientific evidence. Ultimately this will be a political resolution, not something resolved by the United Nations." Feature Interview “The claim Canada has put forward theoretically may have some resources, that may, theoretically, be of value in the future, but right now we certainly don’t know of any,” says Adam Lajeunesse. “But I think that’s the very longterm view that the countries are looking (at).” For more on UNCLOS, the Arctic and why the U.S. remains an outlier on this question, listen to more of Eye on the Arctic‘s conversation with Adam Lajeunesse, the Irving Chair at the Mulroney Institute of Government at St. Francis Xavier University and a Research Fellow at the Canadian Global Affairs Institute. https://www.rcinet.ca/eye-on-the-arctic/wp-content/uploads/sites/30/2019/05/Lajeunesse.mp3