Outreach

Arctic Paradox

Authoritarian Administration: An Environmental Paradox in the Russian Arctic

By:
Troy J. Bouffard
Outlet:
Arctic Yearbook
Date:
Oct, 2018

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Throughout the Cold War, the international community often feared the worst concerning environmental behavior in Russia.
However, post-Soviet Russia continues to make significant progress in environmental stewardship in one specific region – its
Arctic coastline and maritime region. The contrast between on- and offshore priorities remains notably disparate, especially in
policies and behaviors. While previous examination remains lacking in this context, it is important to ask – how, and especially
why, does Russia maintain a significantly different Arctic offshore emphasis concerning the environment? The argument
supported in this article suggests that, while Russia maintains a discernible difference between Arctic land territory versus
maritime behaviors, initial intuition behind “why” indicates that Russia might possibly be setting conditions in order to
eventually leverage soft powers, and ultimately, jurisdiction of an expanded amount of maritime surface territory in the Arctic.
In support of the examination, the use of authoritarian environmentalism provides the framework in which to view the evidence
and perspectives. Two case studies provide methodology, including aspects: 1) involving notable environmental problems within
Russian Arctic land territory located around Norilsk mining as well as the Usinsk oil pipeline, and 2) focusing on Russian
efforts toward offshore environmental remediation, prevention, and protection efforts. The actual differences in policies and
behavior seem clear as a result, and perhaps helps establish the start of a discussion concerning the “why” in order to start
investigating the potential greater reasoning behind such environmental behaviors, and maybe even what to anticipate.