Wrangel I.
C A N A D A
ALASKA
(U.S.)
Yakutsk
Fairbanks
Ft. Greely
Northern Warfare
Training Center
Utqiaġvik
(Barrow)
U.S. EEZ BOUNDARY U
ncl
aim
ed
Overlapping
U.S./Canada
EEZ claims
Planned
Active icebreaker
Under construction
Arctic Council states
The eight countries with
land in the Arctic make up
the Arctic Council. Iceland
is a member but has no
icebreakers.
Arctic Council
observer status
Non-Arctic states
approved by
the council with
no voting rights
Non-Arctic
countries
Unavailable
Sweden
Russia
U.S.CanadaFinland
Denmark
Norway
China
South Korea
France
Germany
JapanU.K.
ItalyIndia
Australia
South Africa
Estonia
Latvia
Argentina
Chile
The power of geography
Russia is positioned for polar
dominance, with an extensive
Arctic coastline. The stra-
tegically vital and lucrative
Northern Sea Route hugs its
northern coast.
Chinese influence
With no Arctic territory
of its own, China is
partnering with Russia
to extract resources and
establish trade routes
as the Arctic thaws.
Ports
Canada and Russia
are building Arctic
ports to serve as strate-
gic hubs for refueling and
moving cargo and troops.
Exclusive economic zones (EEZs)
Nations have jurisdiction over
natural resources on the
seafloor no more than
200 nautical miles
from their coasts.
JASON TREAT AND RILEY D. CHAMPINE, NGM STAFF;
SCOTT ELDER. SOURCES: JANE’S BY IHS MARKIT;
OFFICE OF SENATOR DAN SULLIVAN; NATIONAL
GEOSPATIAL-INTELLIGENCE AGENCY; U.S. COAST
GUARD OFFICE OF WATERWAYS AND OCEAN POLICY;
INTERNATIONAL BOUNDARIES RESEARCH UNIT
THE RACE TO BREAK THE ICE
Icebreakers are key tools for projecting power in
the Arctic, plowing through sea ice so ships can
follow in their wake. Russia has more icebreak-
ers than any other nation; China is also investing
substantially in them. The U.S. has just one opera-
tional heavy icebreaker, used mostly in Antarctica.
Heavy
icebreakers
Year-round
operation in
moderate
multiyear ice
Light
Summer/
autumn
operation
in medium
first-year ice
Medium
Year-round
operation
in thick first-
year ice
Once considered nearly impenetrable, the
Arctic is taking on new strategic importance as
climate change melts its icy armor and trillions of
dollars of resources become accessible. The eight
nations that encircle the region are scrambling
to assert and defend their claims over the Arctic,
which remains one of the most daunting land-
scapes to project power on the planet.
ARCTIC ASSETS
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