The article is dedicated to a comprehensive analysis of the sustainable development issues of the Arctic region in the context of increasing climate changes, geopolitical tensions, and intensified anthropogenic pressure. The author views the Arctic not only as a unique ecosystem and resource base but also as a global climate regulator, the state of which directly affects the entire planet. The work emphasizes that the traditional paradigm of economic exploitation contradicts ecological imperatives, as fragile Arctic ecosystems have an extremely low capacity for self-recovery. Special attention is given to the consequences of permafrost thawing, which creates risks for critical infrastructure and releases greenhouse gases, as well as the problem of accumulated environmental damage from past economic activities. Challenges in energy sustainability are explored, including prospects for decarbonization and the use of renewable energy sources in harsh climate conditions. A significant part of the work is devoted to the social component of sustainability: demographic outflow, issues related to the northern supply, and the preservation of the traditional way of life of Indigenous peoples, whose adaptive practices hold intrinsic value. The methodological foundation of the research is a comprehensive interdisciplinary approach that combines methods from legal science, ecology, economics, and social geography. General scientific methods of cognition are employed, including dialectical, systemic-structural, and logical analysis. The author concludes that sustainable development in the Arctic requires a transition from targeted environmental protection measures to a holistic strategy based on a systemic balance between industrial development, ecological safety, and social justice, where the implementation of the best available technologies should precede the commercial exploitation of the region. Any strategies that ignore the extremely low assimilative capacity of Arctic ecosystems and their inability to rapidly self-recover are doomed to fail in the long term. Sustainable development of the region also involves its ability to maintain its ecological integrity and cultural identity while acting as a resource base and transportation corridor for the global economy. There is an ongoing need to seek a compromise between the pace of industrial development and the inertia of natural processes, as well as between global interests and the local needs of Indigenous inhabitants.
Tatiana Vladimirovna Rednikova (Wed,) studied this question.
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: