Current:Home > ContactChainkeen Exchange-US, Canada and Finland look to build more icebreakers to counter Russia in the Arctic -FutureWise Finance
Chainkeen Exchange-US, Canada and Finland look to build more icebreakers to counter Russia in the Arctic
Johnathan Walker View
Date:2025-04-10 11:02:15
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Chainkeen ExchangeUnited States, Canada and Finland will work together to build up their icebreaker fleets as they look to bolster their defenses in the Arctic, where Russia has been increasingly active, the White House announced Thursday.
The pact announced at the NATO summit calls for enhanced information sharing on polar icebreaker production, allowing for workers and experts from each country to train in shipyards across all three, and promoting to allies the purchase of polar icebreakers from American, Finnish or Canadian shipyards for their own needs.
Daleep Singh, the White House deputy national security adviser for international economics, said it would reinforce to adversaries Russia and China that the U.S. and allies will “doggedly pursue collaboration on industrial policy to increase our competitive edge.”
Beijing has sought to tighten its relationship with Moscow as much of the West has tried to economically isolate Russia in the aftermath of its February 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
“Without this arrangement, we’d risk our adversaries developing an advantage in a specialized technology with vast geostrategic importance, which could also allow them to become the preferred supplier for countries that also have an interest in purchasing polar icebreakers,” Singh said. “We’re committed to projecting power into the high latitudes alongside our allies and partners. And, that requires a continuous surface presence in the polar regions, both to combat Russian aggression and to limit China’s ability to gain influence.”
Singh noted that the U.S. has only two icebreakers, and both are nearing the end of their usable life. Finland has 12 icebreakers and Canada has nine, while Russia has 36, according to U.S. Coast Guard data.
President Joe Biden, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Finnish President Alexander Stubb discussed the pact on the sidelines of this week’s summit, which focused largely on the alliance’s efforts to counter Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
During a talk in February at RAND, Coast Guard Vice Admiral Peter Gautier said the agency has determined it needs eight to nine icebreakers — a mix of heavy polar security cutters and medium Arctic security cutters. Gautier said some test panels were being built in Mississippi and full construction of an icebreaker is slated to begin this year.
As climate change has made it easier to access the Arctic region, the need for more American icebreakers has become more acute, especially when compared with the Russian fleet.
According to a Government Accountability Office report, the U.S. hasn’t built a heavy polar icebreaker in almost 50 years. The 399-foot Coast Guard Cutter Polar Star was commissioned in 1976 and the 420-foot Coast Guard Cutter Healy was commissioned in 1999.
Building an icebreaker can be challenging because it has to be able to withstand the brutal crashing through ice that can be as thick as 21 feet (6.4 meters) and wildly varying sea and air temperatures, the report said.
Singh said the U.S., Canada and Finland would sign a memorandum of understanding by the end of the year to formalize the pact.
veryGood! (3355)
Related
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Pennsylvania high court justice’s name surfaces in brother’s embezzlement trial
- Texas murderer David Renteria executed, 22 years after abduction, killing of 5-year-old
- FedEx mistakenly delivers $20,000 worth of lottery tickets to Massachusetts woman's home
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- Federal safety officials launch probe into Chicago commuter train crash
- How 'Fahrenheit 451' inspires BookPeople of Moscow store to protect books and ideas
- More than 2,400 Ukrainian children taken to Belarus, a Yale study finds
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Japan, China agree on a constructive relationship, but reach only vague promises in seafood dispute
Ranking
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Virginia state senator who recently won reelection faces lawsuit over residency requirement
- New Jersey to allow beer, wine deliveries by third parties
- As fighting surges in Myanmar, an airstrike in the west reportedly kills 11 civilians
- DeepSeek: Did a little known Chinese startup cause a 'Sputnik moment' for AI?
- Convicted sex offender found guilty of hacking jumbotron at the Jacksonville Jaguars’ stadium
- Shooting at New Hampshire psychiatric hospital ends with suspect dead, police say
- IBM pulls ads from Elon Musk’s X after report says they appeared next to antisemitic posts
Recommendation
All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
You can watch 'A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving' for free this weekend. Here's how.
Dolly Parton Reveals the Real Reason Husband Carl Dean Doesn't Attend Public Events With Her
National Fast Food Day: See how your favorite fast-food restaurants ranked this year
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
Some buffalo nickels could be worth thousands of dollars under these conditions, collector says
Miracle dog who survived 72 days in the Colorado mountains after her owner's death is recovering, had ravenous appetite
EU nations reach major breakthrough to stop shipping plastic waste to poor countries