Times of Malta

For sale: unique piece of land in strategic Arctic archipelag­o

A slice of solid ground in famous Svalbard – between mainland Norway and the North Pole – costs €300m

- PIERRE-HENRY DESHAYES

The last piece of privately owned land in the strategic Svalbard archipelag­o in the Arctic is up for grabs, a property likely to entice China but which Norway does not intend to let go without a fight.

The archipelag­o is located halfway between mainland Norway and the North Pole, in an Arctic region that has become a geopolitic­al and economic hotspot as the ice melts and relations grow ever frostier between Russia and the West.

For €300 million, interested parties can acquire the remote Sore Fagerfjord property in southweste­rn Svalbard.

Measuring 60 square kilometres – about the size of Manhattan – the property is home to mountains, plains, a glacier and about five kilometres of coastline, but no infrastruc­ture.

“It’s the last private land in Svalbard, and, to our knowledge, the last private land in the world’s High Arctic,” said lawyer Per Kyllingsta­d, who represents the sellers.

“The Chinese are naturally potential buyers since they’ve been showing a real interest in the Arctic and Svalbard for a long time,” he told AFP, adding that he had received “concrete signs of interest” from the country.

SpeciAl treAty

Since China’s 2018 White Paper on the Arctic – a sign of its interest in the region – the country has defined itself a “near-Arctic state” and plans to play a growing role in the region.

Svalbard is governed by a 1920 internatio­nal treaty that leaves ample room for foreign interests. It recognises Norway’s sovereignt­y over Svalbard, but citizens of all signatorie­s – including China are equally entitled to exploit the region’s natural resources.

Russia, for example, has maintained a coal mining community on Svalbard, via the state-run company Trust Arktikugol, for decades.

But times have changed.

Keen to protect its sovereignt­y, Norway would not look kindly on the Sore Fagerfjord property falling into foreign hands.

Especially hands in China, which Norway’s intelligen­ce services say poses the biggest security risk to the Scandinavi­an country after Russia.

Norway’s attorney general has therefore ordered the owners – a company controlled by a Russian-born Norwegian, according to local media – to call off the planned sale.

“The land can’t be sold without the Norwegian authoritie­s’

approval,” Trade and Industry Minister Cecilie Myrseth told AFP.

“Nor is it possible to hold negotiatio­ns about the property,” she added.

That argument is based on clauses of an old loan granted by the state in 1919. Kyllingsta­d insists the clauses’ statute of limitation­s has expired.

‘red FlAg’

The Norwegian state owns 99.5 per cent of Svalbard and has declared most of the land, including the Sore Fagerfjord property, protected areas where constructi­on and motorised transport, among other things, are prohibited.

But the sellers don’t see things that way, and cite the 1920 treaty.

“All parties (who signed the treaty) have the same rights,” stressed Kyllingsta­d, noting that Norway had built housing, an airport and a harbour in Longyearby­en, the archipelag­o’s main town.

“Imagine if Norway now adopted rules limiting the activities of Russian holdings,” he said. “It would be World War Three.”

According to Andreas Osthagen of the Fridtjof Nansen research institute, the Sore Fagerfjord land has “minimal” economic value and its possible sale does not represent “a huge threat” to Norway.

But, he noted, “owning land on Svalbard could have a strategic value in 50 or 100 years.”

In the meantime, any mention of possible Chinese interest in Svalbard property raises “a red flag to force the Norwegian authoritie­s to do something.”

In 2016, the government paid €33.5 million to acquire the second-last piece of private land on Svalbard, near Longyearby­en, which was also reportedly being eyed by Chinese investors.

A geopolitca­l and economic hotspot as the ice melts and relations grow ever frostier between Russia and the West

Critics subsequent­ly accused the government of being misled over unsubstant­iated arguments.

In 2018-2019, the state had already engaged in negotiatio­ns to buy Sore Fagerfjord but the talks collapsed over the price.

Trade and Industry Minister Myrseth said the option was still open if the terms were “realistic”. (AFP)

 ?? PHOTO: VIKEN KANTARCI/AFP ?? The ice cap, snow and rivers on top of mountains in the Arctic Norwegian Svalbard Archipelag­o, northern Norway.
PHOTO: VIKEN KANTARCI/AFP The ice cap, snow and rivers on top of mountains in the Arctic Norwegian Svalbard Archipelag­o, northern Norway.
 ?? ?? View of Longyearby­en, located on Spitsberge­n island, in Svalbard Archipelag­o. PHOTO: JONATHAN NACKSTRAND/AFP
View of Longyearby­en, located on Spitsberge­n island, in Svalbard Archipelag­o. PHOTO: JONATHAN NACKSTRAND/AFP

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