Alaska, which within its boundaries contains the only U.S. territory north of — or even anywhere near — the Arctic Circle, has long been the nation’s Arctic state.
But is there room at the table for a second “Arctic” state?
If there is, Maine increasingly is vying for that spot, the Portland Press-Herald writes in a piece written by former Anchorage Daily News reporter Tom Bell.
Maine is located about 1,500 miles south of the Arctic Circle — it’s closer to Miami, the Press-Herald points out — but also lies on the other end of the Northwest Passage from Alaska and is connected by shipping lanes and commerce to important ports throughout the North Atlantic.
Maine increasingly has cultivated business ties in the Arctic, including luring the Icelandic shipping company Eimskip away from Virginia, and the subarctic. Maine-based Ocean Renewable Power Co. is working on river energy projects in the Alaskan communities of Iguigig and False Pass.
Other Arctic connections past and present — the only American schooner built for Arctic exploration, the nation’s oldest climate change research institute, a leading Arctic museum and Arctic Studies center — add a depth of knowledge of the Arctic that others states lack, the Press-Herald points out.
Perhaps it’s no surprise, then, that Maine’s junior U.S. senator, independent Angus King, after to a trip to Barrow and a voyage through the Arctic Ocean on a Navy submarine, told Sen. Lisa Murkowski, “I want to be the Arctic senator.”
“She said, ‘No, you can be an assistant Arctic senator,’” King told the Press-Herald.
The pair have teamed up to launch an Arctic caucus in the Senate — a move that’s good for Alaska because it helps Alaska be heard on Arctic issues in Congress, according to Craig Fleener, the state’s Arctic policy adviser.
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