Northeast Passage Becomes Viable Trade Route
Stirling Newberry writes "The New York Times reports on the continued expansion of the sea route along the Russian side of the Arctic Ocean. It was only in 2009 that outside ships were allowed to ply this lane, but Russians have used it since the early 20th century. What makes this year a landmark is that the polar ice cap is smaller at its September minimum than before, allowing large container ships and oil tankers — the backbone of sea commerce — to travel between Europe and Asia, saving time and money over the Suez route, as well as avoiding several politically unstable regions of the world. Putin has been pushing development along the route. While the northwest passage is only gradually opening, the opposite side of the Arctic Ocean looks set for expansion. Siberian Riviera anyone?"
This one was so locked in ice that it could never be used. Now, however, it is viable?
To quote the summary: "Russians have used it since the early 20th century". Hard to understand how it being used for 100 years to you constitutes as "never", and at the same time as proof of global warming due to it recently opening.
The only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for it to be pitted against a slightly greater evil
The Russians use nuclear icebreakers. That doesn't really scale for most commercial traffic, and now you don't need them in summer anymore.
Finally! A year of moderation! Ready for 2019?
Sure, all coastal cities might be gone in fifty years, but who cares; it's lovely spring weather at the pole.
No, we'll just have *new* coastal cities. Much cleaner and nicer ones that New York, for sure.
Actually quoting the register
So this is sort of non-story hype.
A mind is a terrible thing to not use.
Educate yourself, son:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Retreat_of_glaciers_since_1850
https://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested