The War in Ukraine as a Critical Juncture: China, Russia, and the Arctic Collaboration up to 2035





Kauppila Liisa, Kopra Sanna

Heininen Lassi, Exner-Pirot Heather, Barnes Justin

2022

PublisherThematic Network on Geopolitics and Security (TN)

Akureyri

2022

Arctic Yearbook

Arctic Yearbook 2022: The Russian Arctic: Economics, Politics and Peoples

2298-2418

https://arcticyearbook.com/arctic-yearbook/2022/2022-scholarly-papers/427-the-war-in-ukraine-as-a-critical-juncture-china-russia-and-arctic-collaboration-up-to-2035

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/178233046



The outbreak of the war in Ukraine in February 2022 marks a major watershed in Arctic politics. Declining West-Russia relations have transformative implications for the region’s stability, practices of governance, and economic policies, including a potentially rapid green transition. Moreover, China’s ‘neutrality’ in the West-Russia axis adds on to the high level of uncertainty about the future of the Arctic. Unsurprisingly, this dynamic has sparked a newfound interest in mapping the region’s futures in an analytical and rigorous manner, and, consequently, spawned a growing pool of scenario analyses. Unlike most of these exercises, this article abandons the business-as-usual style of reasoning that guides the envisioning of predominantly alarming futures. Instead, it uses the futures research technique of backcasting to construct three scenarios on the continuation of the Arctic cooperation with the Sino-Russian relations on the focus. More specifically, the article produces a set of alternative futures that – despite the differences in their actual content and ethos – all picture an Arctic of 2035 where at least the eight Arctic states collaborate regularly, and in which climate change mitigation and adaptation constitutes a key driver of collaboration. With this research strategy, the article seeks to contribute to the efforts to alleviate regional tensions by immersing the readers into a future world of possibilities and hope – despite our deep condemnation of Russia’s war in Ukraine. 


Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 22:23