27 September, 2018

As the Arctic melts, the fabled North West Passage opens for cargo ships

When a blue-hulled cargo ship named Venta Maersk became the first container vessel to navigate a major Arctic sea route this month, it offered a glimpse of what the warming region might become: a maritime highway, with vessels lumbering between Asia and Europe through once-frozen seas.
Climate change is melting Arctic ice and opening
 the North West Passage to cargo ships.
Years of melting ice have made it easier for ships to ply these frigid waters. That’s a boon for the shipping industry but a threat to the fragile Arctic ecosystem. Nearly all ships run on fossil fuels, and many use heavy fuel oil, which spews black soot when burned and turns seas into a toxic goopy mess when spilled. Few international rules are in place to protect the Arctic’s environment from these ships, though a proposal to ban heavy fuel oil from the region is gaining support.


Read the story from Wired by Maria Gallucci - “As the Arctic melts, the fabled North West Passage opens for cargo ships.”

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