HomeWorldChina’s Arctic gamble: Why Beijing is pushing ships through a risky sea route

China’s Arctic gamble: Why Beijing is pushing ships through a risky sea route

The Northern Sea Route is quicker trade but with vast environmental and geopolitical hazards.

October 04, 2025 / 13:02 IST
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China tests new Arctic route
China tests new Arctic route

In late September, a Chinese shipping container called the Istanbul Bridge departed from Ningbo-Zhoushan port carrying run-of-the-mill freight from batteries to blouses. Instead of taking the conventional southern path to the Suez Canal, it headed north into the icy waters of the Arctic Ocean. It's sailing on the Northern Sea Route, a treacherous shipping route that follows Russia's northern shore and opens into Europe. The trip, billed as the launch of the inaugural China-Europe Arctic Express route, is all part of Beijing's plans to build a "Polar Silk Road." It also illustrates how climate change isn't just reshaping ecosystems but is actually redrawing global trade maps, CNN reported.

The Arctic is warming at a rate close to four times higher than the rest of the world. Large stretches of sea ice that long ago froze ships solid year-round now break and thaw in summer and early autumn, permitting brief windows of navigability. China, peering into the decades ahead with dreams of an ice-free Arctic, has already begun testing commercial sailings that once were the prerogative of icebreakers and scientific missions.

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The enticement of velocity and protection

The Northern Sea Route has one undeniable advantage: speed. By shortening nearly by half the Suez Canal journey, the Arctic route minimizes travel time from China to northern Europe by a mere 18 days. To those businesses that rely on rapid delivery, especially during high shipping season like Christmas, this shortening matters.