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Around the Arctic
December
5, 2003
Alaskan village gets
free gas
SIKU CIRCUMPOLAR NEWS SERVICES
Next winter, residents
in the North Slope village of Nuiqsut hope to be heating their homes with free
and clean-burning natural gas instead of the pricey, dirty oil they use now.
The gas would be piped
in from the Alpine oil and gas field, eight miles north of the Inupiat village
of about 450 people. The field is operated by Conoco Phillips Alaska Inc., the
state's largest oil and gas producer.
Nuiqsut residents negotiated
for the gas to offset the inconvenience of having industry move in to their
neighborhood.
When the Alpine field was
discovered in 1996 and began pumping oil four years later, partially occupying
village land, the villagers made getting gas a priority.
The Barrow-based North
Slope Borough, on behalf of Nuiqsut, is advertising for a contractor to build
a distribution system that will hook in the village's 90 to 100 homes. Plans
are to bring gas to the village's schools, electric power plant and government
buildings later.
Construction is expected
to cost $2 million to $3 million. A 3.5-inch pipeline from the Alpine field
to Nuiqsut has been built.
December
5, 2003
Saami battle Norwegian
military
More than 100 owners and
herders of reindeer in northern Norway have launched a legal battle against
the military.
A military shooting range
called Halkavarre is at the heart of the conflict because it sits on the Saami's
traditional reindeer grazing lands. Military officials said they intend to stay
in the area and even want to expand their activities there, using it for bombing
exercises.
"Now this is war,"
said Geir Haugen, a lawyer representing the reindeer herders.
Haugen said in 1996 the
military agreed to limit its use of the field until a new law on land rights
was in place.
Haugen recently filed documents
in a Hammerfest court calling for an immediate halt to the military's target
practice at Halkavarre.
December
5, 2003
Court rules against
relocated Inughuit
The Danish Supreme Court
has refused to increase an award of 1.7 million kroner ($300,000) to Inughuit
as compensation for being relocated from their community 50 years ago.
And the court didn't support
their claim for traditional hunting grounds around the current site of Thule
Air Base at Uummannaq.
The compensation award
was set by a lower court four years ago. Greenlandic Prime Minister Hans Enoksen
said he was disappointed by the Supreme Court ruling.
"We had assumed that
because the relocation was forced, Hingitaq 53 [an organization representing
those affected by the relocation] would get a ruling in their favour. Considering
how Denmark, as a democratic country, has always defended human rights, it's
a big disappointment that this case ended as it did," Enoksen told Greenland's
Radioavis.
December
5, 2003
Sewers produce caffeine
jag
Researchers at the Norwegian
Institute for Air Research have found traces of caffeine and other drugs in
drainage water and the sea near Tromsø in northern Norway.
Caffeine and drugs flushed
into city sewers may take longer to break down in icy Arctic waters than further
south, which may explain why the levels of pharmaceutical residues matched those
expected for a city three times the size of Tromsø.
Each liter of water discharged
from Tromsø contained up to 100 micrograms of caffeine. In the sea the
concentration was measured at 100 nanograms per liter.
"The concentration
is high. We are surprised that caffeine is not more diluted by the high volume
of water," researcher Roland Kallenborn told the Aftenposten newspaper.
"Caffeine is not caught by purification plants and there is a high and
continuous supply entering the sea."
Caffeine is found in coffee
and cola as well as some medicines. Researchers believe that about 80 per cent
of caffeine comes from households, offices and cafés, with medicines
accounting for the rest.
"We have almost no
information about what kind of problems caffeine can cause in nature. It is
a poison and at very high concentrations it can affect the nervous system. We
don't know the kind of environmental effect caffeine can have on the ecosystem
and this is something that should be thoroughly investigated," Kallenborn
said.
Some samples taken very
close to a sewer outlet near a psychiatric hospital also showed measurable amounts
of anti-epileptic drugs and anti-depressants.
Tromsø sea water
contained measurable traces of ibuprofen, an anti-inflammatory drug often used
to treat arthritis.
December
5, 2003
Police nab young arson
suspects
Iqaluit RCMP have two new
suspects in the recent Nakasuk and Inuksuk high school fires.
Police arrested and charged
two teenage boys with arson on Dec. 2 after they allegedly lit a plastic thermostat
on fire in Building 2223, commonly known as the Ivavik building on Apex Road.
Police said a man found
the thermostat in flames and quickly put it out before the emergency crew arrived.
Investigators said they
were still reviewing a possible connection between the boys and previous fires
but said no evidence has been found so far.
"They're being investigated
to see if they have any involvement with other fires in town," said Const.
Denis Lambe.
The boys, ages 15 and 13,
cannot be named under provisions of the Young Offenders Act.
December
5, 2003
Suspected arson in
Salluit
Four families are homeless
after a fire at a four-plex in Salluit.
Kativik Regional Police
Force and volunteer firemen responded to the fire at about 2 a.m. on Wednesday.
The building was evacuated, and firefighters battled the fire for more than
an hour.
The apartment block suffered
heavy smoke and water damage, and according to Salluit's town manager, Paulusi
Saviadjuk, municipal workers will assess and repair the damage if possible.
With only four new social
housing units built in Salluit this year, Saviadjuk said this week's fire means
the community won't gain any new housing.
Late Tuesday, police had
encountered an intoxicated woman who resided in one of the apartments.
The woman was arrested
in conjunction with the fire, which police suspect was deliberately set.
December
5, 2003
New money for UArctic
Human Resources Development
Canada is giving $441,474 to the University of the Arctic for its International
Academic Mobility program, called "North2North."
North2North is an international
exchange program for students of the North who are studying in the North. It's
organized by the University of the Arctic, an international network of educational
institutions that provide post-secondary education to northern residents.
To get the project going,
Canadian institutions, including Nunavut Arctic College, plan to form a Canadian
Circumpolar Mobility Consortium.
Other Canadian participants
include the Arctic Athabascan Council, Aurora College, Saint Mary's University,
Université Laval, University of Alberta, University of Northern British
Columbia, University of Regina, University of Saskatchewan and Yukon College.
Countries participating
in North2North are Finland, Sweden, Norway, the United States, Iceland, Russia
and now, Canada.
December
5, 2003
King crabs scare fishermen
Fishermen along Norway's
northern coast caught four king crabs in their nets last week, and the catch
scared them.
Fishing industry experts
believe the king crabs will damage the marine environment around the Lofoten
fishing grounds.
The area serves as a spawning
ground for the Norwegian and Russian cod industry, and the fishermen worry the
crabs will eat up everything in sight. No one knows how the crabs wound up in
the nets of brothers Ivar and Henrik Myklebust.
"When we first found
one crab in our net, and then three more, it occurred to me that maybe someone
planted them," Ivar Myklebust told wire service NTB. He added, "I
got shivers down my spine when I saw them come up" from the water.
Tourism officials farther
north hope the crabs can lure visitors interested in going after them. Jens
Harald Henssen of Finnmark Reiseliv thinks so-called "crab safaris"
could be as popular as moose safaris. Two Japanese tour operators already have
expressed interest.
December
5, 2003
Norwegian churches
welcome gays and lesbians
Churches in North Norway
say they welcome homosexuals. The parishes of Svolvaer and Vagan recently promised
no negative words would ever be uttered towards gay churchgoers.
In Svolvaer Church, the
rainbow flag used as homosexuality's banner hangs outside. The flag is meant
to show gays and lesbians that they are welcome and can worship without fear
of finding themselves the subject of a fiery sermon, the newspaper Lofotposten
reports.
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