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China Arctic/Antarctic Science, Technology and Industry: News & Discussions


CHINA STARTED TO BUILD ITS FIFTH ANTARCTIC STATION


China is currently building two large research stations in Antarctica: one for Brazil (the new Ferraz station) and the other for the use of its own Antarctic program.

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Above, China's future base network in Antarctica, with the continent
lined up towards the country's projection to the South Pole


The new station, still without a known name, will be the fifth chinese base on the continent. It will be located on Inexpressible Island, near Zucchelli (Italy) and Jang Bogo (South Korea) stations and a few hundred kilometers away from McMurdo (USA) and Scott (New Zealand), in the Ross Sea, a region of rich marine life which is almost entirely claimed by New Zealand.

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Above, the Terra Nova Bay region

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On the image above, The Inexpressible Island and the sites prospected for the new station


The base is scheduled to be delivered at summer 2022-23. Here is the layout presented in the 2014 environmental evaluation study:

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The first construction materials began to be unloaded by the Xue Long icebreaker last December. The panoramic video below shows the current status of the construction site:



China’s presence in Antarctica began at the shore of the Atlantic Ocean in 1985, with permanent Changcheng (or Great Wall) base, on King George Island. In 1989, its concerns included the Indian Ocean region, being the longitude of the likewise Zhongshan station in line with the extreme west of the Chinese territory.

Zhongshan was the starting point for the country’s expansion towards the southern continent hinterland. Such expansion began at the summer-only Kunlun base (2009), which is the southernmost scientific station after Amundsen-Scott, on the South Pole. Kunlun is also the loftiest of all Antarctic research stations, an ideal site for astronomical studies, and in the next few years it will receive some important telescopes, to be added to the equipment already running there. In the year 2014 a fourth Chinese base was established: Taishan also runs only in summer and plays an important role in the logistics of the annual traverse between Zhogshan and Kunlun.

Through its fifth station, China's presence in Antarctica will also extend to the Pacific Ocean, and its facilities system will gain size and width similar to the Russian and North American networks. That move, coupled with other initiatives that are expected to take place in the coming years, such as the commissioning of a second icebreaker, locally manufactured,the construction of an airfield, near Zhongshan base, and the development of a hot water drill, will further strengthen the country's weight in the southern continent scenario. As seen in every other strategic fields, scientific and military, the Chinese demonstrate strong determination to assume their role as a global superpower.


Originally published at https://infraestruturaantartica.blogspot.com.br/2018/01/a-china-comecou-construcao-de-sua.html.
 
High hopes among Scandinavian backers of ‘Ice-Silk Road’ east
Report submitted on vital 'Arctic railroad' link that could be part of a 'maritime silk route in the north'

By Doug Tsuruoka Editor at Large January 26, 2018 10:18 AM (UTC+8)

Supporters of an ambitious plan to build a railway between Rovaniemi in Finland and Kirkenes in Norway that would serve as an Arctic gateway for China’s Belt and Road project have submitted a report to Finnish and Norwegian authorities and are hopeful the project will be approved by early March.

The report, titled “Vision for an Arctic Railroad,” was delivered to Finnish and Norwegian transport officials on January 19. It’s one of several proposed Arctic rail links. “The national review will be finalized on February 28 and hopefully we will know who will win on March 1,” Timo Rautajoki, a representative of the Lapland Chamber of Commerce told Sør-Varanger Utvikling, a local development organization.

Asia Times reported last year that a group of Finnish business leaders and academics have proposed building a US$3.4 billion “Arctic Corridor” railway that would connect Northern Europe with China and Arctic Ocean deep-water ports. The rail link would connect the city of Rovaniemi in northern Finland with the Norwegian port of Kirkenes on the Barents Sea.

Kirkenes is the closest Western port to Asia along the Arctic’s Northern Sea Route. Under the plan, ships could move goods from China as well as oil and gas from Arctic fields in Russia westward along this northern route to Kirkenes. Cargos would be offloaded to the railway and sent southward through rail connections to Scandinavia, Helsinki, the Baltic states, Poland and St. Petersburg in Russia.

If officials are positive about the technical and feasibility issues, Finland and Norway are expected to begin discussing the project with China and other participants.

Project backers include the Finnmark County Municipality, Sør-Varanger, and Kirkenes Næringshage, a local business organization in Norway, as well as others.

Shorter than Suez
One of the big selling points for a “maritime silk route in the north” is that it would sharply reduce the distance, time and cost of cargo routes between Asia and Europe, which currently rely on the Suez Canal. The report reckons there will be a 40% reduction in sailing distance if the Northern Sea Route is used to connect Northern Europe (from Germany northwards) with China, Taiwan, South Korea and Japan.

There would likewise be a 20% cut in fuel consumption versus Suez with a resulting favorable environmental impact, according to the report.

“The new sea route, combined with the Arctic railway, would save on both time and emissions,” Timo Lohi, a spokesman for the Arctic Corridor project, told Asia Times.

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Finland’s Arctic Corridor project. Illustration: Arctic Corridor

Supporters say the Arctic rail project’s impact on trade will be equally huge. Assuming the railway can accommodate 10% of the current container trade from Asia to Northern Europe, the report projects that 10 southbound trains could leave Kirkenes daily for Finland and other southern points. Annually, this would amount to 550,000 containers trans-loaded per year – or 37,000 containers per month. The same number of containers (either empty or with export cargo) could be sent on the return leg to Asia.

Return cargo to Asia from Finland could comprise timber and biofuels. Norway boasts large volumes of mineral ore as well as products from its aquaculture and fisheries industries that would interest Asian clients.

The cargo estimates are based on a current 7.4-month Arctic navigation season in which the Arctic Ocean is sufficiently ice-free to be navigated by commercial shipping. Accessibility hits a high point during the summer months. But global warming is reducing ice floes in the region to historic lows, suggesting that the Northern Sea Route might eventually be navigable in winter.

“Climate change will melt ice and transport through the Northern Sea Route will become more profitable,” Lohi noted.

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Container traffic between Asia and Europe is also expected to jump nearly threefold by 2040. “So even a share of 3-4% of the combined container imports from China, Taiwan, South Korea and Japan to Northern Europe would generate comprehensive activity at the Port of Kirkenes and on an Arctic railway to Rovaniemi,” the report said.

Officials on board
The Arctic rail project appears to have the support of Finnish and Norwegian officials. Norwegian Transport and Communications Minister Ketil Solvik-Olsen says he’s “very positive” towards the Finnish plan to build an Arctic rail link to Belt and Road.

Finnish Transport and Communications Minister Anne Berner said recently that preparations for the project will continue if official reaction to the January 19 report is positive.

Berner said previously that talks last year between Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin have created momentum for an “ice-Silk Road.”


High hopes among Scandinavian backers of 'Ice-Silk Road' east | Asia Times
 
China starts construction of 1st self-built polar research icebreaker
2016-12-21 15:29 | Xinhua | Editor:Li Yan

View attachment 362674
Photo shows a rendering of China's first domestic-built polar research vessel and icebreaker. Construction of China's first domestic-built polar research vessel and icebreaker began Tuesday in Shanghai, giving a boost to the nation's polar expedition efforts, according to the Polar Research Institute of China. The new vessel will be 122.5 meters long and 22.3 meters wide, with a displacement of 13,990 tonnes and a navigation capability of 20,000 nautical miles. It is being built by Jiangnan Shipyard (Group). (Photo/Xinhua)


View attachment 362675
Photo shows a rendering of China's first domestic-built polar research vessel and icebreaker. Construction of China's first domestic-built polar research vessel and icebreaker began Tuesday in Shanghai, giving a boost to the nation's polar expedition efforts, according to the Polar Research Institute of China. The new vessel will be 122.5 meters long and 22.3 meters wide, with a displacement of 13,990 tonnes and a navigation capability of 20,000 nautical miles. It is being built by Jiangnan Shipyard (Group). (Photo/Xinhua)


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The first piece of steel of China's first domestic-built polar research vessel and icebreaker is being cut in Shanghai, east China, Dec. 20, 2016. Construction of China's first domestic-built polar research vessel and icebreaker began Tuesday in Shanghai, giving a boost to the nation's polar expedition efforts, according to the Polar Research Institute of China. The new vessel will be 122.5 meters long and 22.3 meters wide, with a displacement of 13,990 tonnes and a navigation capability of 20,000 nautical miles. It is being built by Jiangnan Shipyard (Group). (Photo/Xinhua)


View attachment 362677
Photo shows a rendering of China's first domestic-built polar research vessel and icebreaker. Construction of China's first domestic-built polar research vessel and icebreaker began Tuesday in Shanghai, giving a boost to the nation's polar expedition efforts, according to the Polar Research Institute of China. The new vessel will be 122.5 meters long and 22.3 meters wide, with a displacement of 13,990 tonnes and a navigation capability of 20,000 nautical miles. It is being built by Jiangnan Shipyard (Group). (Photo/Xinhua)


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@TaiShang @JSCh

Exciting news! The construction of China's first icebreaker started on Dec. 20, 2016.
I look forward to its commissioning.

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彩云香江
今天 10:31 来自 HUAWEI Mate 10 Pro
好消息!我国首制极地科学考察破冰船昨天入坞啦!
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3月28日,我国首制极地科学考察破冰船H2560在江南造船正式入坞建造,这是该项目的又一个里程碑式节点。国家海洋局极地、中国极地研究中心和江南造船相关负责人参加本次极地科学考察破冰船入坞工作,上海市科委、上海海事局、中国船级社、英国劳氏船级社、中船工业集团有限公司第七〇八研究所、上海双希海事发展有限公司和中国海洋报社等单位一起现场见证了H2560入坞这一重要节点。
该船于2016年12月在江南造船开工建造,由芬兰阿克北极技术有限公司负责基本设计,中船集团第七〇八研究所负责详细设计。该科考破冰船为13000吨级,总长122.5米、型宽22.3米、结构吃水8.3米,装载能力约为4500吨,最大航速16.8节,结构强度满足PC3要求,具备双向破冰能力;装载全回转电力推进系统和DP-2动力定位系统,可同时搭载两架直升机,具有国际先进的海洋环境和地球物理调查设备;船上可搭载科考人员和船员共90人,续航力为2万海里,船上可生产淡水,自持力在额定人员编制情况下可达60天。
极地科学考察破冰船计划于 2018年 8月 28日出坞,随后开展设备系统调试和系泊试验等工作,预计 2019年上半年交船。该船交付后将与“雪龙”号组成极地考察船队,极大提升我国在极地海洋区域的综合考察能力。
(浩汉防务图片)

On 28th March, the construction of the icebreaker had moved into drydock.

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China's first home-built icebreaker begins assembly

chinadaily.com.cn | Updated: 2018-03-29
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A helicopter transports goods and materials from China's research icebreaker Xuelong, or Snow Dragon, to Zhongshan Station in the Antarctic in December. BAI GUOLONG/XINHUA
On Wednesday, China State Shipbuilding Corp started assembling China's first self-developed icebreaker at a shipyard in Shanghai, which is expected to start its first scientific expedition to the Antarctica next year.

At a building berth of the Jiangnan Shipyard, Xuelong 2, or Snow Dragon 2, will be built by connecting different sections. Through computer modeling, the hull will be divided into 114 sections, which will then be assembled into 11 parts and then joined together, stern to bow and bottom to top.

After that, the icebreaker will be painted and equipped with scientific expedition equipment at the berth.

According to the schedule, Snow Dragon 2 will leave berth in Aug 2018, following procedures such as interior decoration, equipment and system adjustment and mooring experimentation.

It is expected to be commissioned in the first half of 2019, to team up with the country's sole current icebreaker Xuelong to conduct scientific research missions in polar areas.

The newly built vessel will considerably improve performance in icy zones, as it can break ice using either its bow or stern. It will be the world's first icebreaker for scientific exploration in polar areas to use two-way icebreaking technology.

The ship will be able to break 1.5-meter-thick ice and endure temperatures of -30 C. It has good mobility and incorporates strict environmental protection measures.

It can quickly change direction in ice zones, greatly improving safety in the complicated conditions of Antarctic off-shore areas.

The basic design of Snow Dragon 2 was finished by Finland, yet detail design, production design and reviews were performed by domestic institutions and companies.

"The project is not simply purchasing the designs and drawings from foreign companies this time," Wu Gang, chief designer of Snow Dragon 2, said.

In building China's first domestically built icebreaker, "It's a road we've never taken before," Wu said. "So we decided to work with a partner to ensure its smooth run."

The State Council said in 2015 the icebreaker project is "collaboratively designed by domestic and foreign experts, but independently built at home."

China owns the intellectual property rights of Snow Dragon 2, according to Wu.

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Next step: Nuclear-powered icebreaker. This a key to promote trade across the Arctic. Otherwise, China will need to continue to buy icebreaker service from Russia.
 
Breaking the ice: China’s entry in the Arctic region
By Kou Jie (People's Daily Online) 17:18, April 02, 2018

Glittering with eye-dazzling floe bergs, an open sea extends ahead, pounding the rugged coastal lines.

Underneath, a steel leviathan is pushing its way through the cold ice, while a hurtling train is meandering across the snowy land.

Such transformation is underway in the Arctic region, one of the world's most desolate and dark lands, which in fact is also home to four million people and a plethora of unique flora and fauna. Due to the surge in exploration of natural resources as well as the intensifying polar ice thaw, the Arctic is now becoming a new global economic and transportation hub, attracting the attention of people around the world.

"The Arctic for the Europeans is becoming a true gateway to the world. Connectivity is one of the major themes of the Finnish chairmanship in the Arctic Council and an important element of the Finnish Arctic strategy," Harri Mäki-Reinikka, ambassador for Northern Policies of Finland's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told People's Daily Online.

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Aker Arctic's icebreaker lab in Helsinki, Finland. Photo by Kou Jie

The Arctic countries' eagerness to exploit the region's transportation advantages has led to the emergence of various sea routes and rail-link projects. The feasibility of Arctic sea routes is now being thoroughly studied, as in many cases transportation by means of the new waterway can be 30 to 50 percent shorter compared to traditional ones such as by means of the Malacca Straits or the Suez Canal. A railway routing to the Arctic Ocean is also being examined, which is expected to promote connections with all of Europe and Asia.

Such grand blueprints have definitely captured the attention of China, the world's largest trader, since 90 percent of its $ 4 trillion annual trade is transported by sea. The country's cutting-edge high-speed rail technologies as well as its abundant infrastructure funds have also made it possible for Sino-Nordic rail cooperation.

"The melting polar ice may make it possible for ships from Chinese harbors to run alongside Russia to Norway. I think China and the Arctic countries will have more cooperation in the future regarding Arctic sea routes and rail projects," Jørgen Randers, professor of climate strategy at the BI Norwegian Business School, told People's Daily Online.

Cutting into the Arctic ice

Once an impassable and everlasting frozen area, sea routes in the Arctic region have become more feasible for shipping between Europe and China, as many scientists have predicted that the Arctic will be ice-free between 2030 and 2050.

Currently, the major sea routes in the Arctic regions are the Northeast Passage, the Northwest Passage and the Transpolar Sea Route. The utilization of such sea routes heavily relies on ice-breaking technologies, as the most commercially viable Northeast Passage only allows ships to pass for some 4 months of the year in the warm season, while the ice-covered Transpolar Sea Route, which is theoretically the shortest route linking the Pacific and Atlantic oceans, remains just a line on the maritime chart with no relevance to the present.

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The model of Polaris, the first LNG-Powered icebreaker in the world. Photo by Kou Jie.

Though China has already vowed to jointly develop the Northeast Passage with Russia and has published a guide with nautical charts and descriptions of ice conditions on the Northwest Passage, the lack of powerful icebreakers still hinder the country's path into the Arctic ocean.

"In order to promote Arctic shipping from Europe to China, it is necessary to build stronger icebreakers that can withstand the rigid environments found in the Arctic," Gunnar Snorri Gunnarsson, Icelandic ambassador to China, told People's Daily Online.

In an effort to tackle such issues, China has been actively seeking opportunities for icebreaking cooperation, especially with Finland which built about 60 percent of the world's icebreakers. According to statistics from Finnish icebreaking giant Aker Arctic, Finland and China have agreed to build a double acting polar research vessel equipped with icebreaking abilities usable while the vessels are both moving forward and backward. These are expected to be built in the shipyard of Shanghai in 2018.

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The five alternative routes for the Arctic Ocean Railway. Photo by Finnish Transport Agency

Meanwhile, Arctic railway projects have also provided China a chance to enter the region, as the construction of an Arctic Corridor may become the shortest, most direct route for goods between Asian and Europe.

Sabina Lindström, Director of Finland's Ministry of Transport and Communications, told the People's Daily Online that five different railway plans were examined by Norwegian, Finnish and Swedish authorities, while the solution that routing to the Arctic Ocean via Oulu, Rovaniemi and Kirkenes will be examined further, with a possible study report to be concluded in December 2018.

"If the construction of the Arctic railway could be realized, it would promote connections with all of Europe and Asia. We are looking for alternative models of financing and large-scale infrastructure projects and have a positive attitude toward innovative solutions and international cooperation," she added.

Though China and the Nordic countries have yet revealed any intentions for cooperation on the railway project, China has suggested in its Arctic White Paper that it will work with countries bordering the Arctic Ocean to build infrastructure such as roads and communication facilities in order to improve connectivity and commercial feasibility in the Arctic transportation field.

"Concrete plans and financial arrangements for all kinds of Arctic railway projects will not be made overnight, so we have to be also patient, yet we need to stay active discussing the issue," said Mäki-Reinikka.

The Polar Silk Road

The emergence of transportation projects in the Arctic region happens to coincide with China's first-ever Arctic White Paper, which was announced in January. The document had long been expected, as China's non-Arctic players, including South Korea and Japan, established the Arctic Strategy Master Plan in 2013 and Arctic Policy in 2015 respectively.

In the document, China has emphasized its interests in opening trade routes and exploring natural resources as well as recapitulating two known pillars of its polar policy which are in line with the needs of many Arctic countries.

"China’s vision concerning the sustainable utilization of the Arctic resources shows that it shares much of interests with the EU. I understand that like Finland, the other Member States of the European Union and many of its institutions are carefully studying China’s initiative," said Mäki-Reinikka.

China’s initiative to build a Polar Silk Road is expected to promote cooperation with Nordic countries in the aspects of transportation and infrastructure. Being members of the China-initiated Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, the Nordic countries may be able to collaborate within the framework of China’s Belt and Road Initiative, which they were originally not included.

"We welcome the interest China is showing [to the Arctic] because we feel that the resources and intelligence China possesses will be helpful for us. All of this could also develop future cooperation in aspects such as shipping and logistics," said Gunnarsson.
 
Preliminary Antarctic station prep done
China Daily, April 23, 2018

Preparation work for the construction of China's fifth Antarctic station has been completed, scientists on the icebreaker Xuelong (Snow Dragon) said on Saturday, after the country's 34th national scientific expedition to Earth's southern polar region.

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Aerial photo taken on April 21, 2018 shows members of China's 34th Antarctic expedition taking part in a welcoming ceremony on a dock in Shanghai, East China. China's research icebreaker Xuelong finished the country's 34th Antarctic expedition and returned to Shanghai on Saturday. The expedition began on Nov 8, 2017 and covered a voyage of 38,000 nautical miles. [Photo/Xinhua]

Temporary housing, a dock and roads have been built at the station on Inexpressible Island in the Ross Sea's Terra Nova Bay, and electric power generation, seawater desalination and long-distance communication have all been established despite severe weather conditions, scientists said at a media briefing after the Xuelong returned to Shanghai following its 165-day expedition.

"Basic surveying and mapping, ecological monitoring, geological exploration and the design of the fifth station have been completed. This is the third year-round station after Changcheng and Zhongshan stations, and the first to be situated on the boundary of the Pacific Ocean," said He Jianfeng, assistant to the chief scientist of this year's 257-member expedition team.

He said the research base will be of great significance because none of China's existing stations - which are used to study things such as the atmosphere, glaciers and astronomy - have a marine research focus.

"This new base on the coast of the Ross Sea - which has the largest continental shelf in the Antarctic region, with rich biodiversity - will be well-used in this respect," he said.

A cottage has also been built nearby to make it easier to watch the 20,000 or so penguins on the island.

"The northern point of the island is home to a large number of penguins, and we hope to keep an eye on them and ensure that the construction of the new station does not harm the local environment," He said.

Construction may be finished by 2022.

Scientists also said they had for the first time discovered marine microplastics, tiny pieces of plastic often used as scrubbers in facial cleansers and toothpastes, in the ocean off the Antarctic Peninsula.

He said microplastics, which reach oceans after passing through wastewater treatment plants, were also found during the national expedition to the Arctic last year.

"That was somewhat understandable as the northern seas are not far from human activity, but it's surprising that they also appeared in the Antarctic," he said.

Lin Weiqing, deputy director of the Shanghai Academy of Environmental Sciences, said microplastics have already been discovered in zooplankton and could eventually find their way to people's stomachs if the zooplankton are consumed by fish and other creatures higher up the food chain.

"That threat has attracted international attention and we'll strengthen monitoring after this discovery," He said.

"If necessary, China, as a responsible power, will unite with other countries to propose that we should take action to protect the Antarctic, which is the common property of mankind."
 
Qingdao: China’s iron gateway to the Arctic

Cyropolitics, May 4, 2018

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MAY 4, 2018

In January, China released its first Arctic Policy. In the U.S., fearful headlines greeted the document, from The Wall Street Journal’s suspicion of whether a “new Cold War” was on the way to Foreign Policy’s proclamation thatChina’s ready to cash in on a melting Arctic.” But beyond the headlines, what’s actually going on on the ground in China? What are the actual places driving China’s northern push, and what’s going on there?

To find out, earlier this week, I traveled to Qingdao, a city of nine million people located southeast of Beijing on the Yellow Sea. I was hosted by Peiqing Guo, an expert in Arctic international law and Chinese interests in the Arctic and professor at the Ocean University of China (OUC), one of the country’s leading institutes on the region. The university is especially strong in Arctic social sciences, which is unusual in a country that places more emphasis on the natural and physical sciences at the poles. About thirty students and faculty focus on the Arctic, and I met with several of them. Overwhelmingly, they sought peaceful relations with the United States and were worried about the negative, fearful reactions that China’s Arctic Policy had generated.

In my presentation, I tried to highlight potential areas for cooperation between the U.S. and China in the Arctic. Both countries have an interest in promoting freedom of the seas, search and rescue, and infrastructure and resource development. The latter is an especially promising area for cooperation in light of the $43 billion Joint Development Agreement signed last November between Alaska and China. As part of the agreement, Chinese banks have promised massive loans to construct the long-sought but never-realized Alaska Liquefied Natural Gas Pipeline.

There are, of course, several geopolitical wildcards that could jeopardize chances for cooperation. First, the U.S. doesn’t appear to be the biggest fan of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), China’s $1 trillion plan to improve and revamp Eurasia’s transportation and trade networks. Government officials have expressed that in a truly globalized world, no single country should have the ability to determine the locations of “one belt” and “one road.” The plan has now, of course, far surpassed its original moniker, for BRI now officially includes the Arctic, as I’ve previously discussed. Up north and around the world, the U.S. is carefully watching China’s every move with great suspicion, if newspaper headlines accurately reflect government sentiments.

A second geopolitical wildcard is that the South China Sea forms a major point of tension between Beijing and Washington, D.C.. While the possibility is low, maritime disputes there, or at least disputes over the underlying principals, could spill over into the Arctic. Third and last, as Russia-China relations continue to strengthen, the U.S. may feel uncomfortably sidelined. Whereas an alliance with China was once a method of containing Russia, now, the U.S. may feel threatened by these two countries’ growing cooperation, especially in the Arctic.

Qingdao: a hub for China’s Arctic pursuits

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Qingdao enjoys strong industrial connections to Northeast Asia and increasingly the Arctic. While the city may not have an instantly recognizable name, it’s located just across the sea from Seoul, South Korea and is close to Fukuoka, Japan and Shanghai, too. The Chinese metropolis’ commercially critical location has helped push its port into the ranks of the world’s top ten in terms of cargo volume. It is a major transshipment port and also ranks sixth in terms of metal ore throughput. In fact, Qingdao port authorities are planning to turn its iron ore handling terminal into the world’s largest. Iron is a key input for steel manufacturing, and in May 2017, it was reported that the country had enough iron ore stockpiled to build 13,000 Eiffel Towers.

Over a century ago, the Germans recognized the strategic nature of Qingdao. In 1898, after witnessing the Qing Dynasty’s military attempting to build fortifications around Qingdao, then just a sleepy fishing village, the Germans essentially forced the Chinese to lease them 553 square kilometers of land. This constituted the first European colony on mainland China. Rather than being settlement colonies like the Americas and Australia, European colonies in China were aimed at economic exploitation.

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Map of Qingdao, China.
Shipbuilding and marine construction

For Qingdao, having one shipyard is not enough. In the past few years, the Chinese government has led the development of a new area, creatively named Qingdao’s “West Coast New Area,” which focuses on the maritime sector. The “New Area” specializes in industries like marine equipment manufacturing and high-tech shipbuilding and has already built key infrastructure for Arctic resource development. Over the past three years, three Qingdao-based companies (one of which is a local subsidiary of McDermott International, an American multinational engineering corporation) built all 36 code liquefied natural gas (LNG) modules needed for Russia’s landmark Yamal LNG project, the world’s northernmost undertaking of its kind. These modules, each weighing 2,000 tons and measuring three stories tall, were shipped to the Yamal Peninsula from Qingdao via the Northern Sea Route. This connection highlights the port’s ability to tie into what might be an important thoroughfare in the future, especially if China succeeds in working with Russia to develop the “Polar Silk Road,” as the Russian shipping route has come to be known.

Shipping and trade

Shipping, then, is naturally a major point of interest for Qingdao as the city expands both its port and its Arctic engagement. In 2013, Danish company Nordic Bulk Carriers shipped 70,000 tons of iron ore from Murmansk to Qingdao. It appears that the iron ore was produced near Murmansk at Russian company Eurochem’s Kovdorsky GOK mine. The Russian mine, the loading docks, and Qingdao’s massive ore stocks are all visible from space thanks to high-resolution, publicly available Google Earth imagery. Even the trucks and cranes handling the ore in the mine and ports, respectively, are visible.

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Kovdorsky GOK mine in Murmansk Oblast, Russia.
Zooming in reveals three trucks driving through the mine.
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Bulk carriers load ore at the port in Murmansk, on Russia’s Northern Sea Route.
In late 2016, HHL Valparaiso made the first open hatch sailing of the Northern Sea Route while carrying to ship-to-shore cranes from St. Petersburg to the Russian Far East. The ship sailed to St. Petersburg from Qingdao via the Northern Sea Route. That same year, a ship carrying paper pulp – the sorry shreds of Finland’s boreal forest – sailed from Kotka, on the country’s Baltic coast, to Qingdao.

In a less commercial but more symbolic event that took place in 2015, China’s star sailor and Qingdao native, Guo Chuan, made the fastest ever navigation of the Northern Sea Route powered only by wind. He and his team made the journey on his trimaran (a three-hulled yacht), Qingdao China, in a mere 13 days. Guo’s story is a tragic one, as he disappeared while sailing somewhere off Hawaii in 2016.

Qingdao is also a big hub for both minerals and seafood. If the proposed Isua iron ore mine in Greenland ever gets going, it’s possible that its exports could end up in the enormous, rusty red piles of the commodity sitting in Qingdao’s port, joining supplies from places like Russia, Australia, and India.
Grabbing cranes handle rusty red iron ore at the port of Qingdao, China in May 2017.
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In this photo from November 2017, the piles are larger.
In terms of more edible commodities, Royal Greenland, the Government of Greenland-owned fishing company that began employing Chinese workers at its fish processing plant in Maniitsoq last year, opened a sales location in Qingdao twenty years ago. The city is one of China’s main fish processing centers, with some 400,000 people, including many young women, employed in the sector nationwide. Already, China imports $880 million of Alaskan seafood yearly, with companies like Qingdao Yu Tai Import & Export, founded in 2012, specifically focusing on the Alaska trade. Salmon, king crab, and pollock are just a few of the Alaskan species filleted and prepared in Qingdao before being re-exported back to – you guessed it – the United States. As China and Alaska look to expand their trade relationship, this fishy and circuitous pathway of globalization will likely continue to grow.

Lastly in terms of trade, a cargo aircraft from Denmark with 2,000 Arctic foxes in its hold delivered them to Qingdao this past January. The foxes will be used to improve the existing Finland-sourced stock of 2,000 white, fluffy critters on a fur farm in Mohe, a city in northeast China. Zhan Yifei, an official at Qingdao’s airport inspection and quarantine bureau, expressed to China Daily, “Animal breeding and processing industries have developed rapidly in recent years, and these foxes are expected to boost modern husbandry in China.” Cooperation between China and other Arctic states to develop fur farming seems like a terrible and inhumane idea, however. Fur farming is far more unethical than hunting animals for their furs, and the growth of such an industry in China could undercut the prices of the furs harvested by Indigenous peoples across the Arctic.

Polar tourism

A more surprising dimension of Qingdao’s Arctic interests involves tourism. The city’s Polar Ocean World amusement park welcomes visitors wishing to see animals like beluga whales, Arctic wolves, and polar bears. I didn’t visit the attraction due to a general objection to seeing wild animals stored in tanks (and several reviews on Google note that conditions at Polar Ocean World seem particularly unethical), but it’s probably a sure bet that it has encouraged guests with the financial wherewithal to go to the Arctic or Antarctic to see the real deal. In 2017, China surpassed Australia as the world’s second-biggest source country for travelers to Antarctica, after the United States. According to the South China Morning Post,5,500 Chinese nationals took the trip to the extreme south, accounting for about 12% of all visitors to the frozen continent. Chinese tourism to Antarctica is growing so quickly that the government has had toissue regulations on how to behave. China’s population is also so big that, as I learned in Qingdao, its government can use its overseas tourists as a “strategic resource,” cutting off offending countries from its list of approved destinations, countries to which tour agencies are allowed to sell vacations. Warning to Iceland: you better behave.

Next up: the Shanghai Cooperation Organization summit

This June, Qingdao will have its moment in the global spotlight when it hosts the annual summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), a Eurasian political, economic, and security organization that includes China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, India and Pakistan as members. At the meeting, which Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin will both attend, officials will work out a five-year plan for implementing the Treaty on Long-term Good Neighborliness, Friendship and Cooperation. All SCO member states have signed the treaty, which seeks to develop amicable ties and trade while agreeing to respect each other’s territorial integrity and inviolability.

The summit will also see officials discuss implementation of projects under the Belt and Road Initiative. With the meeting taking place in Qingdao and with the Russian and Chinese leaders both in attendance, it’s likely that, perhaps with frosty pints of Tsingtao beer in hand, they will discuss their bilateral efforts to transform the Northern Sea Route into the Polar Silk Road – a route that may well lead to Qingdao.

http://www.cryopolitics.com/2018/05/04/qingdao-china-arctic-gateway/
 
China, Japan, ROK agree to strengthen research cooperation on Arctic
Source: Xinhua| 2018-06-09 00:12:48|Editor: yan


SHANGHAI, June 8 (Xinhua) -- China, Japan and the Republic of Korea (ROK) on Friday held the third trilateral high-level dialogue on the Arctic in Shanghai, agreeing on research as priority for cooperation.

The three countries pledged to enhance information exchange, encourage the sharing of data and work on collaborative surveys.

The dialogue was attended by Gao Feng, special representative for Arctic Affairs of the Chinese Foreign Ministry, Kang Jeong-sik, ambassador for Arctic Affairs of the ROK Foreign Ministry, and Eiji Yamamoto, ambassador in charge of Arctic Affairs of the Japanese Foreign Ministry.

They welcomed the first white paper on China's Arctic Policy published in January, and stressed the importance of policy dialogue in mutual understanding and cooperation.

They also welcomed the conclusion of negotiations on the draft agreement to prevent unregulated fishing in the Central Arctic Ocean and pledged to follow up the agreement.

The three Asian countries held their first trilateral talks on the Arctic issues in April in 2016, following the Sixth China-Japan-South Korea Trilateral Summit in 2015.

The ROK will host the fourth dialogue in 2019.
 
China’s Cosco to step up Arctic shipping this summer
by Janne Suokas Jun 21, 2018 15:00

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Two Cosco container ships at a port in Rotterdam in the Netherlands. kees torn Flickr CC BY-SA 2.0

Chinese state-owned Cosco shipping company will send more than ten vessels to Europe through the Arctic sea route this summer.

The company made the announcement on Tuesday at the World Transport Convention in Beijing, according to state-run news agency Xinhua.

In 2013, Cosco became the first in the world to send its container ship Yong Sheng through the Northeast Passage, which is a shipping lane running between the Pacific Ocean and the Atlantic Ocean along Russia’s northern coast.

The company has since dispatched 10 ships on 14 voyages through the Arctic between China and Europe, which it said have saved it 220 days of shipping time, 7000 tons of fuel and US$10m in costs compared to using the traditional route that runs through the Suez Canal.

China, alongside Russia, is keen to explore Arctic shipping opportunities that are expected to increase as ice melts due to the impacts of climate change.

Beijing has plans to turn the northern sea route into an Ice Silk Road of trade between Asia and Europe. Last year, the route was added to its ambitious Belt and Road initiative, which seeks to increase China’s trade links with dozens of countries in Asia, Europe and Africa.

China has called on Russia to cooperate on the construction of the Polar Silk Road and cargo traffic on the Northern Sea Route has increased due to a Chinese-invested liquefied natural gas (LNG) project on the Yamal Peninsula.

Chinese icebreaker Xuelong has also been dispatched to a total of eight missions to explore conditions, resources and commercial shipping opportunities. Last year, Xuelong became the first Chinese vessel to complete a voyage through the Arctic Northwest Passage, which runs along Canada’s northern coast.


China’s Cosco to step up Arctic shipping this summer | GBTIMES


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China one step closer to nuke-powered aircraft carrier with cutting-edge icebreaker comes on stream

By Zhao Yusha Source:Global Times Published: 2018/6/22


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A J-15 fighter jet takes off from China's first aircraft carrier, the Liaoning. Photo: VCG


China has opened the bid to construct its first nuclear-powered icebreaker support ship, a move to prepare for the construction of a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, military observers said.

China National Nuclear Corporation on Thursday opened public bidding for the nuclear-powered icebreaker ship, its website said.

It will be China's first nuclear-powered icebreaker support ship, and it will be able to break ice, open waterways in the polar region and provide electricity.

Bidders are required to participate in research, appraisal, building and testing of the ship, and provide technology support for the user.

This is China's first nuclear-powered ship, which is of great significance to China's development of nuclear-powered vessels, an anonymous military expert told the Global Times.

The ship's nuclear power unit is huge and can be applied to a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier once updated, so it can be seen as a preparation for the aircraft carrier, Song Zhongping, a military expert and TV commentator, told the Global Times.

Nuclear power technology will also be applied to other military vessels, which allows them to travel long distances, and thus protect national security and overseas interests, Song said.

The US and former Soviet Union used their experience with nuclear-powered icebreaker ships to build a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, he noted.

China is attaching more importance to the polar regions, as the ice in the Arctic is melting, and many countries are actively paving new waterways and exploring seabed resources, the anonymous expert said.

The building of a nuclear-powered icebreaker support ship will enhance China's ability to conduct scientific explorations in these regions, according to Song.

In February, China Shipbuilding Industry Corporation (CSIC) said in a statement that it plans to "speed up the process of making technological breakthroughs in nuclear-powered aircraft carriers, new-type nuclear submarines, quiet submarines, maritime unmanned intelligent confrontation systems, maritime three-dimensional offensive and defensive systems, and comprehensive naval warfare electronic information systems."

The statement has caused heated discussion as this is the first time a State-owned Chinese defense company has openly identified nuclear-powered aircraft carriers.

China commissioned its first aircraft carrier Liaoning, a refurbished Soviet ship it bought from Ukraine, in 2012. Its second carrier and the first domestically built carrier, known as Type 001A, was launched in April last year.
 
People's Daily, China 4 hrs ·

Arctic route between Russia and China opens, saving 20 days and 14K km

Vladimir Rusanov, an ice-breaking liquefied natural gas (LNG) carrier, is now heading toward China at a speed of 29.6 km/h, after departing from Russia and crossing the Arctic and the Bering Sea, marking the first time for a merchant carrier to sail the #Arctic route through Eurasia.

Compared to the traditional route—Sues Canal, the new route will save about 20 days and 14,000 kilometers.

The carrier is jointly operated by China’s China Ocean Shipping (Group) Company and Mitsui Japan. The first carrier was delivered by the end of last year, when Yamal LNG was launched—a project which aims to integrate natural gas exploration, liquefaction, transportation, and sales.

Six months later, thinner Arctic ice in summer enabled the carrier to pass through the Arctic Circle and Bering Sea and then head for main ports in East Asia, including Tokyo, Busan, and Shanghai.

It is a good signal for #China and Japan, as both countries have huge need for natural gas. Nearly 40 percent of China’s natural gas was imported last year, and it will be home to the fastest growing energy products in the next 30 years, according to the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

The North Pole is widely recognized as one of the most abundant natural gas resources in the world, as it holds an estimated 17 percent of the world’s proven natural gas reserves and 30 percent of its undiscovered reserves, according to US Geological Survey.

Yet, with the continuous exploration of the North Pole, concerns about environment protection have surfaced. Environmentalists worry that increased human activities will accelerate global warming and harm the natural habitat.

Meanwhile, China’s stance on North Pole energy exploration has always been clear—prioritizing environment protection and reasonable utilization. China released a white paper on the country’s Arctic policy in January, which again expressed China’s commitment to the existing framework of international law, including the UN Charter, UNCLOS, treaties on climate change, and the environment, as well as the relevant rules of the International Maritime Organization.

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First shipment of gas from Yamal LNG project arrives in China
China Plus Published: 2018-07-19 22:00:57

The first shipment of liquefied natural gas (LNG) from the Yamal LNG project in the Arctic arrived in Jiangsu Province in eastern China on Thursday, reports thepaper.cn.

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The Vladimir Rusanov, carrying liquefied natural gas (LNG) from the Yamal LNG project in the Arctic, arrives in Jiangsu Province on Thursday, July 19, 2018.[Photo: China National Petroleum Corporation]

The maiden voyage to China of the Vladimir Rusanov, a 172,000-cubic-meter LNG carrier, was commemorated by a ceremony attended by Nur Bekri, the director of the National Energy Administration of China, and Alexander Novak, Russia's minister of energy.

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The Vladimir Rusanov, carrying liquefied natural gas (LNG) from the Yamal LNG project in the Arctic, arrives in Jiangsu Province on Thursday, July 19, 2018.[Photo: China National Petroleum Corporation]

The LNG carrier traveled to China via a 10,700-kilometer-long northern sea route, which is about 13,400 kilometers shorter than the traditional eastern shipping route via the Suez Canal and the Strait of Malacca. The new route could cut more than 20 days from the voyage, according to thepaper.cn.

The Yamal LNG project operated by JSC Yamal LNG is a joint-venture with Russia's largest independent natural gas producer NOVATEK. The China National Petroleum Corporation and the Silk Road Fund are both major stakeholders.

The LNG extraction project on the Yamal Peninsula is still under construction. When fully complete, the gas it produces will be shipped to the Asia-Pacific and European markets. This includes more than three million tons of LNG that will be imported annual to China for the China National Petroleum Corporation starting next year.
 
China’s Cosco to step up Arctic shipping this summer
by Janne Suokas Jun 21, 2018 15:00

Cosco-Ships.jpg
Two Cosco container ships at a port in Rotterdam in the Netherlands. kees torn Flickr CC BY-SA 2.0

Chinese state-owned Cosco shipping company will send more than ten vessels to Europe through the Arctic sea route this summer.

The company made the announcement on Tuesday at the World Transport Convention in Beijing, according to state-run news agency Xinhua.

In 2013, Cosco became the first in the world to send its container ship Yong Sheng through the Northeast Passage, which is a shipping lane running between the Pacific Ocean and the Atlantic Ocean along Russia’s northern coast.

The company has since dispatched 10 ships on 14 voyages through the Arctic between China and Europe, which it said have saved it 220 days of shipping time, 7000 tons of fuel and US$10m in costs compared to using the traditional route that runs through the Suez Canal.

China, alongside Russia, is keen to explore Arctic shipping opportunities that are expected to increase as ice melts due to the impacts of climate change.

Beijing has plans to turn the northern sea route into an Ice Silk Road of trade between Asia and Europe. Last year, the route was added to its ambitious Belt and Road initiative, which seeks to increase China’s trade links with dozens of countries in Asia, Europe and Africa.

China has called on Russia to cooperate on the construction of the Polar Silk Road and cargo traffic on the Northern Sea Route has increased due to a Chinese-invested liquefied natural gas (LNG) project on the Yamal Peninsula.

Chinese icebreaker Xuelong has also been dispatched to a total of eight missions to explore conditions, resources and commercial shipping opportunities. Last year, Xuelong became the first Chinese vessel to complete a voyage through the Arctic Northwest Passage, which runs along Canada’s northern coast.


China’s Cosco to step up Arctic shipping this summer | GBTIMES


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中国远洋海运杂志
7月19日 03:11 来自 华为 P8max

【中远海运特运第一艘从国内出发前往北极的船舶启航】7月18日早上8点,中国江苏盐城大丰港,日朗风清。迎着朝霞,中远海运特运新造36000吨冰级多用途船“天佑”轮装载着大批风电设备、钢材等货物,缓缓驶离码头,踏上了西行经北极东北航道前往欧洲的旅程。
Translation:
China Ocean Shipping Magazine
July 19 03:11

[The first ship of COSCO SHIPPING from the country to the North Pole set sail] At 8:00 am on July 18, Dafeng Port, Yancheng, Jiangsu, China, was cleared. Facing the morning glow, COSCO SHIPPING's new 36,000-ton ice-class multi-purpose vessel "Tianyou" was loaded with a large number of wind power equipment, steel and other goods, slowly drove off the dock, and embarked on a journey westward through the northeastern northeast waterway to Europe.

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9th Arctic research expedition leaves Shanghai
Ke Jiayun 17:14 UTC+8, 2018-07-20
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Jiang Xiaowei / SHINE
Xuelong at the dock before departure.


China's icebreaker Xuelong, or Snow Dragon, lifted its anchor in Shanghai to set of for the North Pole on Friday morning for its 9th Arctic research expedition, the Polar Research Institute of China said.

Carrying more than 130 crew, the vessel is scheduled to return to Shanghai in late September after a journey of more than 12,300 sea miles. It's the first polar expedition organized by the Ministry of Natural Resources, which was formed in March.

The nation's first domestically-built polar research vessel and icebreaker Xuelong 2 will be put into use in future Arctic expeditions because it's better equipped with scientific research facilities.

According to the institute, compared with previous Arctic expeditions, this journey takes less time but will undertake more tasks with more young people involved.

This expedition will push forward the country's construction of an observation network in the Arctic and conduct research in some key areas like the Bering Sea, the Chukchi Sea and high latitude zones of the Arctic Ocean. Research will also be done on hot issues such as the ecological environment, fishing resources and new types of pollutants in the Arctic. Radionuclide, marine microplastics and ocean acidification are all subjects among their research.

Wei Zexun, a chief scientist of the expedition team, said some new research tools will be applied in this expedition under a trial basis, including an unmanned ice station.

The research team also plans to enter the central areas of the Arctic to test the seaworthiness of the central channel and do some preparation for the Multidisciplinary Drifting Observatory for the Study of the Arctic Climate (MOSAiC).

International cooperation will be launched between the expedition team and two foreign universities from France and the US. Three of their researchers will accompany the Chinese team to the Arctic for research.

"The main target of international cooperation this time is ocean acidification research," Lei Ruibo, a chief assistant of the team said. "In recent years, the ocean acidification problem has been growing worse and drawing people's attention — collecting data is very important."

Lei said as well as allowing foreign researchers to be aboard the Xuelong, Chinese scientists will board other countries' vessels for future projects.
 
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