By Shelley DuBois
As the polar ice caps recede, Canada plans Asian shipping routes and sustainable developments for its northern lands.
Climate change is reshaping our world from pole to pole. But one result of global warming could alter the face of commerce in North America and Asia forever: the opening, thanks to the melting polar ice caps, of a new maritime shipping route through the Arctic ocean. The route would connect Asia with Northern Canada and might open up in the next 20-30 years, according to the Canadian government. When that happens, the Québecois will be ready.
“We’re building a parallel canal to the Panama Canal for Chinese ships so they can accelerate the transport of goods,” Jean Charest, the Premier of Québec, tells Fortune. Charest and his government predict demand in China, India and other emerging markets will increase dramatically in the next 20 years. During that same time period, “Climate change is going to change this whole economy.” So, he asks, “How do we develop?”
His answer focuses on trade. This month, Charest announced Québec’s Plan Nord, which aims to convert the northern portion of the province into an economic hot spot and capitalize on rich mineral resources in the tundra. But that’s not all: The trade pathway cleared by global warming could usher in a new mentality in Western economic growth. Unlike previous development plans that have bulldozed first and asked questions later, Plan Nord takes the unprecedented approach of tackling sustainability from the get-go.
The pressure is on to succeed, not just economically, but environmentally. “It’s very exciting and a little frightening because there’s so much at stake,” says Mathew Jacobson, the manager of the International Boreal Conservation Campaign, which works to protect Canada’s boreal forest and is part of the Pew Charitable Trusts. Failure would signal that even the most well-equipped, environmentally conscious nation can’t solve the riddle of boosting business while safeguarding the environment.
Plan Nord targets an area of about 450 thousand square miles north of the 49th parallel. Over the next 25 years, the government wants to build the infrastructure to mine metals, construct energy facilities, boost tourism and establish sustainable logging. In addition, the government wants to do so with the blessing of leading members of the four aboriginal nations that inhabit Northern Québec — roughly 33,000 aboriginals live there, accounting for about a third of the area’s population.
Plan Nord would also protect 50% of Canada’s Boreal Forest in Québec from industrial development. “It’s about twice the size of Texas,” Jacobson says, “They’d be protecting one Texas.”