Ten Years of International Shipping on the Northern Sea Route: Trends and Challenges

Analysis of detailed statistics shows remarkable fluctuations in the volume and composition of voyages on the Northern Sea Route (NSR) along the northern coast of Russia since international use began in 2010. There has been strong growth in destination shipping between the Arctic and ports outside t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Björn Gunnarsson, Arild Moe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cappelen Damm Akademisk NOASP 2021-02-01
Series:Arctic Review on Law and Politics
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arcticreview.no/index.php/arctic/article/view/2614/5113
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spelling doaj-36e3bf92525641288bd6843428db1c212021-02-10T07:44:27ZengCappelen Damm Akademisk NOASPArctic Review on Law and Politics2387-45622021-02-0112043010.23865/arctic.v12.2614arctic.v12.2614Ten Years of International Shipping on the Northern Sea Route: Trends and ChallengesBjörn GunnarssonArild MoeAnalysis of detailed statistics shows remarkable fluctuations in the volume and composition of voyages on the Northern Sea Route (NSR) along the northern coast of Russia since international use began in 2010. There has been strong growth in destination shipping between the Arctic and ports outside the region, but transit shipping between the Pacific and the Atlantic has not experienced the growth many had anticipated. Explanations are found in international market conditions as well as in the management of the NSR, with important lessons for the future development of different shipping segments. Shipping companies from several countries took part in the period up to 2019, but they seem to have become less central in the current phase of NSR shipping, which is dominated by the transport of hydrocarbons out of the Arctic. Russia expects international transit to pick up later. However, Russia alone cannot determine the volume of international traffic: it is the international shipping industry that will assess the balance of factors and conditions, and conclude if and when the shorter Arctic routes are safe, efficient, reliable, environmentally sound and economically viable in comparison with other routes.https://arcticreview.no/index.php/arctic/article/view/2614/5113arctic shippingtransit shippingdestination shippingmaritime transportmaritime logisticsnorth-east passagerussiaarctic natural resources
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Björn Gunnarsson
Arild Moe
spellingShingle Björn Gunnarsson
Arild Moe
Ten Years of International Shipping on the Northern Sea Route: Trends and Challenges
Arctic Review on Law and Politics
arctic shipping
transit shipping
destination shipping
maritime transport
maritime logistics
north-east passage
russia
arctic natural resources
author_facet Björn Gunnarsson
Arild Moe
author_sort Björn Gunnarsson
title Ten Years of International Shipping on the Northern Sea Route: Trends and Challenges
title_short Ten Years of International Shipping on the Northern Sea Route: Trends and Challenges
title_full Ten Years of International Shipping on the Northern Sea Route: Trends and Challenges
title_fullStr Ten Years of International Shipping on the Northern Sea Route: Trends and Challenges
title_full_unstemmed Ten Years of International Shipping on the Northern Sea Route: Trends and Challenges
title_sort ten years of international shipping on the northern sea route: trends and challenges
publisher Cappelen Damm Akademisk NOASP
series Arctic Review on Law and Politics
issn 2387-4562
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Analysis of detailed statistics shows remarkable fluctuations in the volume and composition of voyages on the Northern Sea Route (NSR) along the northern coast of Russia since international use began in 2010. There has been strong growth in destination shipping between the Arctic and ports outside the region, but transit shipping between the Pacific and the Atlantic has not experienced the growth many had anticipated. Explanations are found in international market conditions as well as in the management of the NSR, with important lessons for the future development of different shipping segments. Shipping companies from several countries took part in the period up to 2019, but they seem to have become less central in the current phase of NSR shipping, which is dominated by the transport of hydrocarbons out of the Arctic. Russia expects international transit to pick up later. However, Russia alone cannot determine the volume of international traffic: it is the international shipping industry that will assess the balance of factors and conditions, and conclude if and when the shorter Arctic routes are safe, efficient, reliable, environmentally sound and economically viable in comparison with other routes.
topic arctic shipping
transit shipping
destination shipping
maritime transport
maritime logistics
north-east passage
russia
arctic natural resources
url https://arcticreview.no/index.php/arctic/article/view/2614/5113
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