In 1982, Russian and Canadian diplomats teamed up to ensure that the UN Convention provides enhanced pollution prevention rights to coastal states in ice-covered waters within 200 miles of shore. It's time, now, to negotiate a protocol providing enhanced protection in the areas beyond.
It's also time to negotiate a treaty on search and rescue. With hundreds of cruise ships and thousands of commercial airliners traversing the Arctic each year, a major accident is inevitable. When it happens, hundreds of lives will depend on information and assets being deployed without regard for international boundaries or national pride.
For co-operation to work, politicians will have to resist the easy headlines offered by Arctic sovereignty. During the 2007 Russian election campaign, Artur Chilingarov led a mission to plant a Russian flag on the ocean floor at the North Pole. The Russian Foreign Minister later dismissed the exercise as a "publicity stunt" that had not been approved by the Kremlin.(....)
But co-operative engagement can bring mutual benefits, while sometimes helping to change the ways in which countries behave. For the same reasons that we trade with China, we should work with Russia - on obvious, pressing matters of common concern.
Above image is copyright to Anthony Jenkins / Globe and Mail

