Why President Obama wants more Arctic icebreakers
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President Obama聽came to the Alaska's majestic Arctic region to talk about climate change, but his聽conversation on Day 2 of a historic three-day trip聽drifted into something more prosaic: the need for more US icebreakers.
On Tuesday, the president called for the United States to buy or build more Coast Guard icebreaking vessels in the Arctic, which has emerged as a growing region for commerce, tourism, and industry.聽The Arctic is believed to hold up to 25 percent of the world's untapped oil and gas supplies.
Icebreakers 鈥 for those in warmer climes 鈥 are hulking ships which sail into the big sheets of ice that cover the ocean in the Arctic, breaking up the frozen mass to open lanes of travel for other vessels.
The president said that the lack of icebreakers in the American fleet risks control of shipping routes, oil fields, and fishing grounds, and protected habitat, not to mention the ability for the US to perform emergency search-and-rescue operations.
"The growth of human activity in the Arctic region will require highly engaged stewardship to maintain the open seas necessary for global commerce and scientific research, allow for search and rescue activities, and provide for regional peace and stability," the White House said, in a statement.
According to the White House, the US currently has two functioning icebreakers in its fleet, with only one of those being able to perform heavy-duty operations. That compares with 40 icebreakers for Russia, with 11 more on the way.
Retired Coast Guard Adm. Robert Papp Jr., who serves as US special representative for the Arctic, said when he joined the Coast Guard in 1970, the US had eight heavy icebreaking ships.
"Do we need eight icebreakers? I think not. But I know we need more than one, which is what we鈥檝e got right now," Admiral Papp聽. "The problem is, what鈥檚 the national imperative now? And that鈥檚 what I鈥檝e been struggling with."
The president鈥檚 proposal speeds up the acquisition of聽a聽new heavy-duty聽Arctic ice breaker by two years, to 2020, and calls on Congress to fund the聽construction of additional vessels.
Climate change has rapidly changed the landscape of the Arctic region. Melting sea ice has opened up the area for new opportunities, but also stepped up international rivalries as the US struggles to assert itself into the space.
Russia has continued to grow its influence itself in the Arctic. Last month, Russia submitted a claim to the United Nations to expand its territory by some聽463,000 square miles of the Arctic sea shelf, extending more than 350 nautical miles from the country's shore.
Along with his call for more icebreaking ships, Obama plans to hike to the melting Exit Glacier and tour Kenai Fjords National Park by boat in an attempt to shine a light on the realities of climate change.
"I鈥檒l be sharing my experiences with you along the way, because I want to make sure you see what I鈥檓 seeing," the president wrote Monday聽. "And when you do, I want you to think about the fact that this is the only planet that we鈥檝e got 鈥 and we鈥檝e got to do everything we can to protect it."