The Arctic: The Silent War Reshaping Global Power
“Empires do not move toward comfort, but toward change.
And in that change, it is not the strongest who survives, but the one who first understands where power is shifting.”

Energy, routes, and strategic dominance are converging in a region once considered irrelevant.
As the ice retreats, the Arctic is emerging not as a distant frontier, but as the central arena where the balance of global power will be redefined.

  1. The Arctic stops being a periphery

The Arctic is ceasing to be a remote frontier and is becoming a central space in the global system. Accelerated melting, with summer sea ice losses exceeding 40% over recent decades, is opening maritime routes that were previously inaccessible and exposing high-value energy and mineral resources. These routes are key because they connect Asia, Europe, and North America more directly, reducing distances by up to 40%, which implies shorter transit times, lower fuel consumption, and logistics savings worth billions of dollars annually.

The United States, Russia, and China have begun to reposition themselves in the region, not for scientific exploration, but for strategic control. The Arctic stops being peripheral because it concentrates two critical variables of the 21st century: resources and routes. What used to be ice and distance is now access and advantage.

  1. Greenland – key territory

Greenland, an autonomous territory within Denmark, has moved from being a geographic periphery to becoming a central point on the Arctic geopolitical chessboard. Its location between North America, Europe, and the North Pole turns it into a strategic node for the control of maritime routes and military projection. Added to this are still underexploited resources, including rare earths, uranium, iron, and potential energy reserves, whose projected value is estimated between USD 200 billion and more than USD 1 trillion under expanded strategic scenarios.

  1. Natural resources – the real interest

Interest in the Arctic is not symbolic, it is material. Beneath the ice lie energy and mineral resources that can redefine the global economic balance. The Arctic is estimated to hold about 13% of the world’s undiscovered oil, equivalent to approximately 90 billion barrels, and about 30% of undiscovered natural gas, with reserves close to 1,670 trillion cubic feet. Added to this are critical minerals such as rare earths, uranium, iron, and other strategic metals indispensable for the energy transition and the technological industry.
The value of these resources lies not only in their volume, but in their capacity to sustain the energy and industrial system of the 21st century.

Hard figures of the Arctic

  • Estimated oil

~90 billion barrels

  • Estimated natural gas

~1,670 trillion cubic feet

  • Estimated global share

13% of undiscovered oil
30% of undiscovered gas

Strategic figures: the mineral value of the Arctic

Rare earths (REEs)

  • Location: Greenland, Arctic Russia
  • Use: technology, defense, energy
  • Estimated value: USD 5–15 billion annually

Note: much greater potential due to unexploited reserves
Uranium

  • Location: Greenland, Arctic Canada
  • Use: nuclear energy
  • Estimated value: USD 10–12 billion annually

Iron (Iron ore)

  • Location: Greenland, Canada, Arctic Russia
  • Use: infrastructure, global industry
  • Estimated value: USD 200–300 billion annually (global market)

Potential value of the Arctic
Beneath the Arctic ice there are not only isolated resources, but a strategic concentration of energy raw materials and critical minerals that, taken together, make up one of the largest untapped reservoirs of wealth on the planet.

Economic translation

  • Potential oil value: USD 7–10 trillion
  • Potential natural gas value: USD 8–12 trillion
  • Potential critical minerals value: USD 2–5 trillion

Total estimated value of the Arctic
USD 20–30 trillion (20–30 million million dollars)

Beneath the Arctic ice there are not only resources. There are strategic assets that, taken together, represent hundreds of billions of dollars and control over the industrial supply chains of the 21st century

  1. 4. Maritime routes – the structural shift

Arctic maritime routes represent one of the most significant changes in global logistics in the 21st century. Melting is enabling the opening of the so-called Northern Passage, a route connecting Asia and Europe through the Arctic, reducing distances by up to 40% compared with traditional routes such as the Suez Canal.

Russia already controls a large part of this route through its Arctic coast, while China is incorporating it into its Polar Silk Road strategy, and the United States is observing its strategic impact. It is not just a new route, it is an alteration of the global logistics map.

Hard figures of the logistical shift (Arctic)
Reduction in Asia–Europe distance

  • Up to 40% shorter (vs. Suez Canal)

Transit time

  • 30–45 days → 18–25 days
  • Reduction: 10–20 days per voyage

Logistics cost savings

  • USD 200–600 per container (TEU)
  • USD 500,000–1,500,000 per ship voyage
  • Potential aggregate impact:

USD 10–25 billion annually
Reduction in fuel consumption

  • 20%–30% less per route
  • Estimated savings:

USD 300,000–800,000 per voyage
USD 5–15 billion annually (potential global scale)

The Arctic does not just shorten routes. It reduces costs by billions of dollars and redefines the economics of global transportation.

  1. Russia – the dominant actor

Russia is, today, the dominant actor in the Arctic. Not because of future projection, but because of effective presence. It possesses more than 50% of the Arctic coastline, which gives it direct geographic control over the main northern route. Added to this is already deployed infrastructure: military bases, ports, defense systems, and a fleet of icebreakers (including more than 40 icebreakers, several of them nuclear-powered) that allow it to operate under extreme conditions where other actors still depend on limited capacities.

Hard figures of Russia’s presence in the Arctic

Arctic coastline under influence

  • ≈ 50% of the total Arctic coastline
  • Associated strategic value (resources + routes):

USD 10–15 trillion in potential economic value under its area of influence

Operational icebreakers

  • ≈ 40 units (including nuclear-powered ones)
  • Estimated fleet value:

USD 12–20 billion

  • Unit cost (reference):

USD 300 million–1.5 billion per nuclear icebreaker

Active military bases

  • Dozens across the Arctic (reopened and new installations)
  • Estimated investment in military infrastructure:

USD 5–10 billion

Control of the Northern Sea Route (NSR)

  • Largely under Russian jurisdiction
  • Investment in route development (ports, logistics, monitoring):

USD 50–100 billion

  • Potential revenue from transit and logistical control:

USD 5–15 billion annually (projection)

Russia is not entering the Arctic. Russia is already installed.

  1. United States – strategic repositioning

The United States is not starting from zero in the Arctic, but it is in a phase of repositioning. Its presence is articulated mainly through Alaska, which gives it direct access to the region, and through its growing interest in Greenland as a point of strategic projection. The objective is not only economic. It is geopolitical: to contain Russia’s expansion and balance China’s entry into Arctic routes and resources. For decades, the Arctic was not a central priority for Washington. Today, it is beginning to be.

Hard figures of the U.S. repositioning

  • Arctic territory (Alaska)

~1.7 million km²

  • Operational icebreakers

~2 main ones (vs >40 Russia)

Projected investment in Arctic capabilities

  • USD 5–15 billion
  • Key strategic bases

Alaska + presence in Greenland

The United States does not dominate the Arctic. It is trying not to lose it.

  1. China – the external actor entering

China is not an Arctic country, but it has defined itself as a “Near-Arctic State,” a political category that allows it to justify its interest in the region. Its strategy is not based on territorial control, but on economic presence and logistical projection. Through investments in infrastructure, participation in energy projects, and development of maritime routes, China seeks to integrate itself into the Arctic system without needing to possess territory. The so-called Polar Silk Road is part of this logic, connecting the Arctic with its global trade network.
 
Hard figures of China’s Arctic strategy

Participation in Arctic projects (energy and infrastructure)

  • Presence in LNG, mining, and polar logistics projects
  • Estimated committed investment in the Arctic:

USD 80–100 billion

Investments in energy (liquefied natural gas – LNG, Arctic Russia)

  • Participation in key projects (e.g. Yamal LNG, Arctic LNG)
  • Estimated investment:

USD 50–80 billion

Potential reduction in Asia–Europe routes

  • Up to 40% shorter (Northern Route vs. Suez)
  • Associated logistics value:

USD 10–25 billion annually (potential savings)

Global investment in the Silk Road (Belt and Road Initiative, including the Arctic)

  • Total global investment:

USD 1–8 trillion (1–8 million million)

  • Polar component (“Polar Silk Road”):

logistical + energy + commercial integration

Reduced transit time (Asia–Europe)

  • Reduction: 10–20 days per voyage
  • Associated economic value:

USD 500,000–2,000,000 per ship
Editorial average: ≈ USD 1,000,000 per voyage

This block shows that:

  • China plays the long game (infrastructure + financing)
  • it is not seeking direct military domination, but control of economic flows
  • the Arctic is an extension of its global strategy

China does not need territory in the Arctic. It needs to be inside the system that controls it.

  1. Europe – between dependence and reaction

The European Union faces the Arctic from an intermediate position, marked by its high external energy dependence and its limited military projection capacity in the region. For Europe, the Arctic is not only an economic opportunity, but a strategic necessity tied to access to resources, routes, and supply stability.

Hard figures of Europe’s position in the Arctic

External energy dependence (EU)

  • ≈ 55% of total energy consumption
  • Annual value of energy imports:

USD 400–700 billion

Gas imports (pre-Russia crisis)

  • Up to 40% of gas came from Russia
  • Estimated annual value (before 2022):

USD 150–250 billion

Investment in energy transition (EU)

  • Accumulated plans (Green Deal + REPowerEU):

USD 500 billion–1 trillion

  • Objective: reduce external dependence + accelerate clean energy

Military capacity in the Arctic

  • Limited compared with Russia and the United States
  • Estimated investment in Arctic defense (Nordic countries + NATO):

USD 20–50 billion

Europe is not competing to dominate the Arctic, it is competing not to depend on it.

This block shows that:

  • Europe enters the Arctic out of energy necessity, not territorial ambition
  • its weakness is military and logistical, not economic
  • its strategy is to reduce dependence more than to control territory

Europe is present in the Arctic. But it does not control it.

  1. Greenland – resources vs sovereignty

Greenland faces a structural dilemma between economic development and control over its own territory. As an autonomous territory of Denmark, it depends largely on external fiscal transfers, which represent about 50% of its public budget. However, the potential of its resources (rare earths, uranium, iron, and strategic minerals) opens the possibility of greater economic independence. That option, in turn, implies increasing openness to foreign investment, mainly from the United States, China, and European actors.

Hard figures of the Greenland dilemma

Transfers from Denmark

  • ≈ 50% of the public budget
  • Estimated annual value:

USD 600–700 million

Total population

  • ≈ 56,000 inhabitants

Potential value of resources (strategic minerals)

  • Rare earths, uranium, iron, zinc

USD 200 billion–1+ trillion (estimated potential)

Projected foreign investment (mining and exploration)

  • Projects under development and evaluation

USD 5–20 billion

This block shows that:

  • Greenland’s dilemma is political, not geological
  • its current dependence contrasts with its potential
  • it is one of the most sensitive points on the Arctic chessboard

Greenland is not deciding only how much to grow. It is deciding who will participate in that growth.

  1. Global economic impact

The opening of the Arctic introduces a structural change into the global economy by modifying the logic of transport and distribution. The reduction in distances between Asia and Europe, which can reach up to 40%, implies lower operating costs, lower fuel consumption, and greater speed in the flow of goods. This adjustment is not marginal; it directly affects the competitiveness of traditional routes such as the Suez Canal and reconfigures global logistics centers. China, the United States, and Russia do not view this change as an operational improvement, but as a strategic advantage in the circulation of world trade.

Hard figures of the economic impact (Arctic)

Reduction in logistics costs

  • 10%–30% less on Asia–Europe routes
  • Associated economic value:

USD 50–150 per container (TEU)
USD 500,000–1,500,000 per ship voyage
Aggregate impact: USD 10–25 billion annually

Reduction in Asia–Europe distance

  • Up to 40% shorter (vs. Suez Canal)
  • Associated logistics value:

USD 5–15 billion annually (transport efficiency)

Total potential annual savings (Arctic logistics)

  • Sum of efficiency in time, fuel, and operation:

USD 20–50 billion annually
Transit time

  • 30–45 days → 18–25 days
  • Reduction: 10–20 days per voyage
  • Economic value of time:

USD 500,000–2,000,000 per ship
Average: ≈ USD 1,000,000 per voyage

This block makes clear that:

  • the Arctic is not only geopolitics → it is direct economics
  • the value lies in time + cost + volume
  • the logistical change is measurable in tens of billions of USD

When routes change, transport does not just change. The global economy changes.

  1. Geopolitical impact

The Arctic has become a space of direct competition among great powers. The United States and Russia are contesting control of routes, access to resources, and military presence in a region where the initial advantage favors Moscow because of geography and infrastructure. Added to this balance is China, which, without Arctic territory, has managed to insert itself through investment and strategic projection.

Hard figures of the geopolitical balance (Arctic)
 
Main powers involved

  • United States • Russia • China

Russian share of the Arctic coastline

  • ≈ 50% of the global Arctic coastline
  • Strategic value under influence:

USD 10–15 trillion (resources + routes + energy)

Chinese investments in the Arctic

  • Energy, mining, and logistics projects

USD 80–100 billion committed

Expanding military presence

  • Bases, radars, ports, and Arctic capabilities increasing
  • Estimated investment (Russia + NATO + U.S.):

USD 50–120 billion

This block shows that:

  • the Arctic is already in real dispute, not future dispute
  • the competition is economic + military + logistical
  • the balance depends on who controls routes and resources

The Arctic is not a territory at peace. It is a territory in competition.

  1. Militarization of the Arctic

The Arctic has ceased to be a low-tension zone and has become a space of growing militarization. Russia has reactivated and expanded military bases along its Arctic coast, deploying air defense systems, radars, and permanent naval presence. The United States, for its part, has begun strengthening its capacity in Alaska and increasing military exercises in the region.

Hard figures of Arctic militarization

Expanding military bases

  • Dozens of active installations in the Arctic region
  • Estimated infrastructure investment (Russia + U.S. + NATO):

USD 20–50 billion

Operational nuclear submarines

  • Active fleets of the United States and Russia
  • Estimated value per unit:

USD 2–4 billion

  • Aggregate value of deployed capabilities:

USD 100–200 billion

Surveillance and control systems

  • Satellites, advanced radars, maritime and air monitoring
  • Estimated investment:

USD 10–30 billion

Military exercises and operational deployment

  • Sustained increase in Arctic operations
  • Estimated annual operating cost:

USD 2–5 billion per year
This block makes clear that:

  • the Arctic is already an active military zone
  • investment is not symbolic → it is structural
  • power is not contested only with resources, but with control capacity

The Arctic is not only opening to trade. It is closing under a logic of military control valued at hundreds of billions of dollars.
 

  1. Scenario 2030–2040

Between 2030 and 2040, the Arctic moves from promise to operation. Maritime routes become seasonal but regularly usable, integrating into global logistics chains as a complement to traditional corridors. Russia consolidates its operational advantage on the Northern Route, the United States increases its presence to balance influence, and China deepens its economic insertion into the Arctic system.

Hard figures of Arctic investment (2030–2040)

Total accumulated investment (infrastructure, energy, logistics)

  • USD 300–700 billion
  • Includes: Arctic ports, icebreakers, maritime routes, gas, and oil

Russia (operational dominance)

  • Estimated accumulated investment: USD 150–250 billion
  • Development of the Northern Sea Route (NSR)
  • Energy infrastructure (LNG gas, Arctic oil)

China (indirect / strategic investment)

  • Estimated investment: USD 80–100 billion
  • LNG projects, financing, polar logistics
  • Integration into the “Polar Silk Road”

United States + allies (Canada, Nordic countries)

  • Estimated joint investment: USD 70–150 billion
  • Security, infrastructure, mining and energy exploration

Greenland (mining and strategic projects)

  • Direct and committed investment: USD 5–15 billion
  • Exploration: rare earths, uranium, iron
  • High geopolitical interest because of its potential

It is a region where hundreds of billions of dollars are already committed, defining routes, territorial control, and access to resources before the ice disappears completely.

  1. Closing

The Arctic has become a point of convergence among trade, energy, and geopolitics. The opening of new maritime routes, the availability of strategic resources, and the growing presence of great powers are redefining the way the global system is structured. Russia, the United States, and China are not competing for the Arctic as an isolated territory, but as a platform of influence over the system as a whole.

“The ice is not disappearing. It is revealing the true map of power.”
“And as in every stage of evolution, it will not be those who hold the most territory who prevail, but those who first understand how to dominate what is emerging.”
“The Arctic is not melting. It is revealing who will control the next phase of the global system.”

Author: Mauricio Herrera Kahn

Bibliography

  • Arctic Council

Arctic Climate Impact Assessment
Governance, cooperation, and climate change in the Arctic

  • U.S. Geological Survey

Circum-Arctic Resource Appraisal
Estimate of oil, gas, and minerals in the Arctic
~13% of the world’s undiscovered oil and 30% of undiscovered gas

  • International Energy Agency

World Energy Outlook – Arctic Insights
Energy, exploitation, and economic viability

  • NATO

Strategic Outlook for the Arctic
Security, maritime routes, and geopolitical tension

  • Center for Strategic and International Studies

Arctic Geopolitics and Great Power Competition
The U.S., Russia, and China in the Arctic

  • Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs

Greenland and Arctic Strategy
Greenland’s role within the Kingdom of Denmark

  • Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland

Mineral Resources of Greenland
Rare earths, uranium, and strategic minerals