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Northern Sea Route Shipping Falls Short of Russia’s 2024 Target

A Russian nuclear-powered icebreaker. Christopher Michel / flickr

Shipping volumes along Russia’s Northern Sea Route reached a record 37.9 million tons in 2024, the state nuclear corporation Rosatom announced Thursday, though that figure still lagged far behind earlier targets.

President Vladimir Putin had previously said that shipment volumes along the route should increase to 80 million tons by 2024, and according to Russia’s ambitious 2020 Arctic Strategy, shipments are supposed to reach 130 million tons by 2035.

Despite missing the target of 80 million tons for last year, Rosatom, which oversees the route, highlighted other milestones, including a record 92 voyages and a 100% approval rate for the 1,312 shipping applications submitted in 2024.

Rosatom director Alexei Likhachev also announced plans to further expand Russia’s transportation network, proposing a new corridor from Kaliningrad in the Baltic Sea to Vladivostok in the Far East.

Russia touts the Northern Sea Route, which stretches some 5,000 kilometers (3,107 miles) between the Barents Sea and the Chuckchi Sea, as an alternative shipping lane between Europe and Asia, claiming it can shorten transit times by up to 15 days compared to the Suez Canal.

The Northern Sea Route is closed to conventional shipping for much of the year. But as human activity heats the planet, melting Arctic ice is making the route increasingly accessible, raising both economic opportunities and environmental concerns about its future use.

Climate scientists said this week that 2024 was the hottest calendar year on record, with global temperatures 1.6 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial averages.

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