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Lassi Heininen, Editor Heather Exner-Pirot, Managing Editor Joël ...

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9<br />

<strong>Heininen</strong><br />

Arctic Yearbook 2012<br />

as essential regional forums. Here the Kingdom “will retain the ‘Arctic 5’”, but the AC is<br />

mentioned with the goal of strengthening cooperation within the Council. In terms of<br />

bilateral cooperation the Strategy mentions Canada, the USA, the Nordic countries, Russia,<br />

China, Japan and South Korea.<br />

As a conclusion, based on the four aims and four chapters, the priority areas as well as main<br />

tasks of the Strategy can be interpreted to be, first, to enhance maritime safety and enforce<br />

sovereignty; second, to exploit mineral resources and new economic opportunities and use<br />

renewable energy, maintain a leading role in Arctic research, and promote Arctic cooperation<br />

on human health; third, to pursue knowledge building on climate change, and manage the<br />

Arctic nature based on the best scientific knowledge; and final, to prioritize global<br />

cooperation, and enhance cooperation in the AC and under the ‘Arctic 5’.<br />

All in all, the primary focus and ultimate aim of the Strategy is undoubtedly twofold: on one<br />

hand, to strengthen Greenland’s new position in its status of self-government and (re)define<br />

a new position of the Kingdom of Denmark in the Arctic as a ‘global player’; and on the<br />

other hand, to react and respond to the ongoing environmental, geo-economic and<br />

geopolitical change(s) in, as well as the growing global interest toward, the Arctic region.<br />

Finally, the Strategy has a clear global perspective.<br />

Finland’s Strategy for the Arctic Region<br />

“Finland’s Strategy for the Arctic Region” was adopted by the Finnish Cabinet Committee<br />

on the EU and launched in June 2010 (Prime Minister’s Office, 2010).<br />

Finland is one of the eight Arctic states with significant economic, political and security<br />

interests in the Arctic region. Consequently, the Strategy document clearly states (for the first<br />

time) that “[a]s an Arctic country, Finland is a natural actor in the Arctic region” (Prime<br />

Minister’s Office, 2010:7). Finland has also been active in international Northern and Arctic<br />

undertakings like, for example, the initiatives for the Arctic Environmental Protection<br />

Strategy (AEPS) and the EU’s Northern Dimension (Lipponen, 1997), and has long had<br />

some sort of ‘de facto’ Northern (dimension) policy (<strong>Heininen</strong>, 1999: 150-198). Finland has<br />

not, however, had an official Arctic policy of its own before.<br />

After the five coastal states of the Arctic Ocean had adopted their respective Arctic<br />

strategies/state policies and had their first ministerial meeting in May 2008, Finland ‘woke

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