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Whaling season has commenced in Norway
On April 1st, Norwegian whalers could commence this year's minke whale hunt.
The quota is 1,641 animals, an increase of 235 from the previous year. Last year, 428 animals were caught.
10 vessels participated in last year's whaling. This year, 14 vessels have registered. So far, only "Reinebuen" from Lofoten in Northern Norway has begun the hunt, reports Lofotposten.
Wallenberg takes over Stegra
The Wallenberg family will now become the largest owner of the Swedish steel company Stegra, reports Dagens Industri.
The bill for investors that rescues the green steel company in crisis will total SEK 15 billion. The Wallenberg family and their investor collective will pay half of this sum, or SEK 7-8 billion.
Stegra, formerly H2 Green Steel, is building the world's first large-scale green steel plant in Boden in Northern Sweden, but has faced major financial problems.
Critical fiber cables better secured
A cable that are exposed in the open air makes Norway more vulnerable to sabotage. Now the National Communications Unit (Nkom) and the e-com industry are joining forces to strengthen security around critical infrastructure.
“We need to gain better control over which cables are so important that they must be better protected against damage, sabotage and outages,” says Svein Scheie, security director at Nkom according to a press release.
He believes the work is very important for digital preparedness in Norway.
According to Minister of Digitalization and Public Administration Karianne Tung (Labour), there is great economic and social value in the use of the cables.
"In the government's plan for Norway, we are investing heavily in security in the digital infrastructure. The fiber cables transport great values for Norwegian business to the world. They are the basis for us to live and work throughout the country. That is why it is so important that we secure them better against sabotage, accidents and extreme weather", says Tung.
Hidden lake network beneath Arctic glaciers
Researchers have identified 37 subglacial lakes beneath glaciers in Canada's Arctic, 35 of them previously unknown, according to CBC News.
The study has revealed a hidden water system that could help scientists better understand how glaciers move and lose ice.
Scientists say knowing where the lakes are, and how they fill and drain, could improve our understanding of how quickly glaciers are melting and sea levels are rising. The lakes form a complex network of interconnected water bodies flowing beneath the ice, largely hidden until now.
Thousands of salmon died after landslide
In March, the Norwegian business Holmøy Havbruk lost 9,300 salmon after a slush flow at their facility in Fiskefjorden in Lødingen municipality, Northern Norway. According to the company, the fish probably died from acute poisoning when the avalanche masses hit the cages.
"Fortunately, reports of landslides that have hit fish farms or had negative consequences for the fish are rare," says Aud Skrudland from the Norwegian Food Safety Authority to iLaks.
This is also confirmed by the Directorate of Fisheries.
"This type of incident can occur, but very rarely," says Communications Director Anette Aase, who emphasizes that most facilities are located far enough from mountain slopes to avoid the risk of avalanches.
Avalanches have nevertheless led to consequences in the past. Troms County Council refers to facilities having had to be moved after avalanches, and recalls an incident in 2021 where a facility with 1.2 million fish was hit in the Alta fjord.
NTI makes voting bonus for Inuits permanent
As a measure to increase voter turnout, Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. (NTI) gave out $100 vouchers to Inuits who voted in the presidential election.
The scheme had an immediate effect: Voter turnout increased from 18 percent in 2022 to 66 percent in 2024, NTI CEO Kilikvak Kabloona told CBC News.
The voucher program is now becoming permanent.
At the same time, NTI is introducing stricter rules: Only Inuit-owned businesses with a physical presence in Nunavut can accept the vouchers in the upcoming by-election.
This is drawing criticism from the Kivalliq Chamber of Commerce, which believes that online Inuit businesses are being unfairly excluded.
“It should be up to the people, it should be up to the Inuit, to decide where they want to spend that voucher,” says President Tara Qunngaataq Tootoo Fotheringham.
NTI responds that the intention is to ensure that the values remain in local communities.
New poll: Iceland against EU membership
A new opinion poll from Iceland shows that more Icelanders oppose EU membership than are in favor, writes RUV Iceland.
According to the poll, 47% of the population is against Iceland joining the EU, while 40% are positive. Thirteen percent are undecided.
When only those who actually take a position are counted, 54% are against Iceland joining the EU, compared to 46% in favor, the survey suggests.
Support has fallen by four percentage points, from 44 percent in April last year, while opposition has increased by eleven points from 36 percent in the same period.
Arctic military leaders met in Iceland
This year's physical edition of the Arctic Security Forces Roundtable (ASFR) was held in Iceland at the end of March.
The forum – co-chaired by Norway and the US European Command – brings together senior military leaders from the seven allied Arctic states, as well as from the observer states of France, the UK, Germany, and the Netherlands.
Also present were representatives of the US Northern Command and NATO JFC Norfolk, which has now been granted permanent observer status in ASFR.
The military leaders exchanged views on security challenges in the Arctic, with a focus on building shared situational awareness and coordinated approaches to deterrence and defense in the region. The NATO Arctic Sentry initiative was highlighted in this context.
They also visited Keflavík Air Station and gained insight into Iceland's defense-related roles and responsibilities. Last year's conference took place in Kirkenes, Northern Norway.
Oulu 2026: Arts festival links the Arctic and the Mediterranean
The European Capital of Culture year in Oulu, Northern Finland, opened in January. Now, Oulu2026 announces that the ambitious E75 Art Bus will soon will depart from city’s town hall.
On April 9th, the rolling art festival will begin its journey through 20 cities and villages along Europe’s eastern edge (the E75 road). While the southernmost stop is in Crete, Greece, the art bus will round off its journey at the Finnmark coast, Northern Norway, with festivities in Vardø on May 16th.
At the various locations, artists on the bus will create performances, exhibitions, workshops and discussions around topics such as democracy, the climate crisis, diversity, and community.
Among them is a dancer who sheds light on folk dance as a form of resistance, a ceramic artist who collects people's sorrows across Europe to release them into the Barents Sea, as well as a media artist who researches migration and invites the audience to sing with birds.
The project connects people, cultures and perspectives from the Arctic to the Mediterranean in a time when contact, mobility and hope are more important than ever, writes Oulu2026.
Milestone in construction of Canadian icebreaker
Last week, production began at the Canadian Davie's shipyard in Quebec of the Polar Max icebreaker, one of two new polar icebreakers being constructed for the Canadian Coast Guard.
Polar Max, expected to be delivered by 2030, is part of the Icebreaker Collaboration Effort (ICE Pact) that Canada, Finland and the United States signed in 2024.
Construction of the Polar Max hull began at Davie's shipyard in Helsinki, Finland, in August 2025.
The second new Canadian icebreaker is being built at Seaspan's shipyard in Vancouver.
"In a region shaped by rapid climate and geopolitical change, these vessels will play a vital role in Canada’s Arctic future. Flying the Canadian flagyear‑round in Arctic waters, they will strengthen our sovereignty, support maritime safety and security, and provide the essential services northern communities and Arctic science rely onfor decades to come," says David J. McGuinty, Canada’s Minister of National Defense.
Finland had its warmest March in history
This year, the average temperature in March was higher than any other month since records began, according to the Finnish Meteorological Institute.
The average temperature throughout the country was 1.1 degrees Celsius, a new record for March, YLE reports. The previous record, 0.0 degrees Celsius, was set in 2007.
The average temperature for the month ranged from +3 in southwestern Finland to -2.5 in northern Lapland.
The heat caused the snow to melt rapidly in almost all of the country.
In Sodankylä in Lapland, the average temperature was the warmest in over a century, namely -0.7 degrees Celsius.
Trump threatens to withdraw from NATO - again
US President Donald Trump said in an interview on Wednesday that he is seriously considering pulling the US out of NATO after the allies refused to join the Iran war on his side.
“I’ve never been impressed with NATO. I’ve always known they’re a paper tiger and Putin knows that too, by the way,” Trump told Britain’s The Telegraph.
Trump is upset that the other NATO countries have not wanted to step in and secure oil shipments through the Strait of Hormuz, which Iran effectively stopped after the US and Israel's attack on Iran.
The president draws comparisons to the war in Ukraine.
“Ukraine was not our problem. It was a test and we were there for them. But they are not there for us,” Trump said, referring to Iran.
No sign eruption in Iceland is ending
There are no signs that the eruption sequence on Sundhnúksgígaröð, on Iceland's Reykjanes Peninsula, is coming to an end - despite the slow speed of magma accumulation, RUV reports.
Magma intrusions and eruptions remain the most likely scenario on the Reykjanes Peninsula, according to a statement from Veðurstofa Íslands (Icelandic Meteorological Office) issued alongside a new hazard assessment for the area, valid until June.
13 conscripts suffered frostbite in Northern Sweden
Thirteen conscripts suffered frostbite during an exercise in Norrbotten, Northern Sweden, in February after the heater in their tent stopped working, according to SVT.
The number of people affected by frostbite in the Swedish defense sector has increased significantly this winter.
During the first two months of the year, 134 cases of frostbite were reported. In comparison, 47 cases of frostbite were reported in all of 2025.
Norway's northernmost glacier is almost gone
Norway's northernmost glacier, Nordmannsjøkelen in Seiland National Park in Finnmark, has shrunk from a large ice cap to small ice remnants.
This was reported by the Norwegian Water Resources and Energy Directorate in an op-ed at Forskning.no.
The glacier has lost 92 percent of its area since 1970. Now, only one small glacier arm still shows signs of movement in the form of cracks in the ice.
The glacier is expected to disappear completely in the near future.
Alaskans demonstrated against Trump in Anchorage
This Saturday, a crowd gathered in Anchorage to demonstrate against Donald Trump and many of his administration's policies.
This was reported by Anchorage Daily News.
The demonstration included speeches and music before the crowd marched against the president.
The demonstration was a part of a nationwide protest called "No Kings". This is the third time 'No Kings' protests have been organized around the US.
New Greenlandic members of parliament
In Tuesday's new elections to the Danish Parliament, two new members were elected from Greenland: Naaja H. Nathanielsen of Inuit Ataqatigiit (IA) and Qarsoq Høegh-Dam of Naleraq.
With this, Nathanielsen leaves her position as Greenland's Naalakkersuisoq (Minister) for Industry, Energy, Raw Materials, Justice and Gender Equality. She replaces IA's long-time parliamentary representative Aaja Chemnitz.
"I believe that the time has come for a reform of the structure of the kingdom. It is not about division, but about securing the future", Nathanielsen wrote on Linkedin as part of his election campaign.
IA became the largest Greenlandic party in the election with 6133 votes, followed by Naleraq (5268), Demokraatit (3767), Siumut (3515) and Atassut (2290). The voter turnout in Greenland was 52.3%.
Canada and Norway strengthen cooperation
Enhanced Canadian-Norwegian cooperation is being rolled out in new areas following Canadian Prime Minister Mike Carney's (Liberal) visit to Norway in mid-March.
Now the countries are aiming for increased cooperation in the field of research, not least when it comes to Arctic research.
This is stated in a new joint statement, launched in connection with the visit of the Norwegian Minister of Research and Higher Education Sigrun Aasland (Labour) to Canada this week.
"We live in turbulent times and Canada is among our most important allies. Quantum technology, AI and Arctic research are crucial for both security and competitiveness, and are areas where we want even closer cooperation with Canada", says Aasland.
New satellite launch attempt from Andøya Spaceport
This Wednesday evening, the German company Isar Aerospace will make a new attempt to launch the Spectrum rocket from Andøya Spaceport in Northern Norway.
The rocket will carry satellites of various types. If all goes according to plan, this could be the first satellite launch from mainland Europe.
According to Isar, the launch window will open at 9 PM CET at the earliest. The launch can be followed live here.
If weather conditions are not favorable, new attempts will be made until April 19th. Isar's first test flight with the Spectrum from Andøya last year ended with the rocket falling into the sea shortly after the launch.
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Arctic sea ice nears record low
This year's sea ice maximum is set to be the second lowest since satellite measurements began, only to be turned off in 2025, reports the Bjerknes Center for Climate Research.
Since 1979, satellites have been monitoring sea ice in the Arctic and measuring how extensive the ice has been at its greatest extent. In their first year, the measurements showed an extent of over 16.5 million square kilometers of sea ice, from the first measurement until this year the ice has been reduced by a full 1.5 million square kilometers.
Only 2018 and 2025 have had similar low values at this time of year.