The Arctic is no longer the remote, frozen frontier of centuries past. As climate change accelerates the melting of polar ice, the Far North is rapidly transforming into one of the most strategically contested regions on Earth. What was once a region defined by isolation and scientific cooperation has become a theater of great-power competition, resource rivalries, and military posturing. From newly accessible shipping lanes to vast deposits of oil, gas, and rare earth minerals, the Arctic is emerging as the world’s next great geopolitical battleground.
This previous Arctic geopolitical analysis examined the early stages of Arctic competition. Since then, the pace of change has only accelerated, drawing in global powers from Moscow to Beijing and Washington.
The Melting Arctic: A New Frontier of Strategic Competition

Climate change is reshaping the Arctic at an unprecedented rate. Summer sea ice extent has declined by roughly 40% since satellite records began in 1979, and scientists project that the Arctic Ocean could see ice-free summers as early as the 2030s. This dramatic transformation is opening up economic opportunities that were once unthinkable.
Two major shipping routes are becoming increasingly navigable: the Northern Sea Route along Russia’s Siberian coast, and the Northwest Passage through the Canadian Arctic Archipelago. These routes can cut transit times between Asia and Europe by up to 40% compared to the Suez Canal, offering massive savings in fuel and shipping costs. For China, this represents a potential game-changer for its Belt and Road Initiative, which has been extended into the Arctic via the “Polar Silk Road.”
The economic stakes extend far beyond shipping. The U.S. Geological Survey estimates that the Arctic holds approximately 13% of the world’s undiscovered oil reserves and 30% of its undiscovered natural gas. The region is also rich in critical minerals — including rare earth elements essential for everything from electric vehicle batteries to military hardware. Greenland, in particular, has become a focal point of interest due to its vast deposits of rare earths, uranium, and iron ore.
Russia’s Arctic Militarization and the New Cold War in the North
No nation has invested more heavily in Arctic military infrastructure than Russia. Moscow views the Arctic as both an economic lifeline — the Northern Sea Route is critical for exporting Siberian oil and gas — and a strategic buffer zone against NATO. Over the past decade, Russia has reopened and modernized dozens of Soviet-era military bases along its Arctic coastline, built new airfields, and established a dedicated Arctic command structure within its armed forces.
Russia’s Northern Fleet, headquartered at Severomorsk on the Kola Peninsula, is the country’s largest and most powerful naval force. It operates a fleet of nuclear-powered submarines armed with intercontinental ballistic missiles, giving Russia a second-strike capability that transits under the Arctic ice cap. The fleet’s icebreaker fleet — the world’s largest — ensures year-round access to Arctic waters, a capability no other nation can match.
NATO has responded with growing concern. The alliance has increased the frequency of Arctic military exercises, including the biennial Cold Response drills in Norway. Norway, which shares a border with Russia in the Arctic, has deepened its cooperation with NATO and the United States. Finland and Sweden, both now NATO members following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, have further shifted the military balance in the region. China has also emerged as a significant Arctic actor, investing in Russian energy projects and conducting joint military exercises under the banner of strategic partnership.
Resource Competition: Oil, Gas, and Rare Earth Minerals Under the Ice

The Arctic’s resource wealth is staggering. The Barents Sea, Kara Sea, and East Siberian Sea are home to some of the world’s largest untapped hydrocarbon basins. Russia’s Yamal Peninsula has already become a global hub for liquefied natural gas production, with Chinese investment playing a key role in financing the region’s massive LNG plants. Norway continues to explore for oil in the Barents Sea, while the United States has restarted leasing in the Alaska National Petroleum Reserve.
But it is not only oil and gas that drive Arctic resource competition. The region contains some of the world’s largest known deposits of rare earth elements — materials critical for the green energy transition. These include neodymium and praseodymium used in wind turbines and electric vehicle motors, as well as dysprosium and terbium essential for high-strength permanent magnets. China’s near-monopoly on rare earth processing gives Beijing a powerful incentive to secure Arctic sources.
Greenland stands at the center of this mineral rush. The island’s ice sheet covers what geologists believe could be one of the world’s largest untapped deposits of rare earths. Both China and the United States have sought influence in Greenland — China through mining investments and infrastructure deals, the United States through diplomatic engagement and a reopened consulate in Nuuk. The Svalbard Treaty, which governs the Norwegian archipelago, remains a point of diplomatic contention, particularly regarding resource extraction rights and Russia’s presence in the region.
Canada’s sovereignty claims over the Northwest Passage are also contested. Ottawa considers the passage to be internal Canadian waters, while the United States and other maritime nations view it as an international strait. As ice recedes and commercial shipping increases, this dispute is likely to intensify.
The Legal and Diplomatic Chessboard: UNCLOS, the Arctic Council, and Future Governance
The legal framework governing the Arctic is complex and increasingly contested. The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) provides the baseline rules, allowing coastal states to claim extended continental shelves beyond the standard 200-nautical-mile Exclusive Economic Zone. Russia, Canada, Denmark (via Greenland), Norway, and the United States are all pursuing competing claims to the seabed under the Arctic Ocean, where immense oil and gas reserves may lie.
The Arctic Council, established in 1996 to promote cooperation among the eight Arctic states, has been severely strained by geopolitical tensions. Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, the Western members of the Council paused participation in its meetings, effectively freezing much of the body’s work. While some activities have since resumed, the Council’s future as a forum for quiet diplomacy is uncertain.
The Ilulissat Declaration of 2008, in which the five Arctic coastal states pledged to resolve boundary disputes peacefully through the existing legal framework, remains a touchstone of Arctic governance. However, as competition for resources intensifies and military presence grows, the pressure on these diplomatic guardrails will only increase. The Arctic is entering an era where old rules are being tested by new realities, and the world is watching closely to see whether cooperation or conflict will define the region’s future.
As the ice recedes and the stakes rise, the Arctic is becoming a microcosm of twenty-first-century geopolitics — a place where climate change, resource scarcity, military strategy, and great-power rivalry all converge. The decisions made today about Arctic governance will shape not only the future of the region but the global balance of power for decades to come.







