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Russia focused on ‘important’ expansion of continental shelf in Arctic: Putin

Click to play video: 'Arctic Power Play: How climate change and Russian aggression are creating a perfect storm in Canada’s north'
Arctic Power Play: How climate change and Russian aggression are creating a perfect storm in Canada’s north
RELATED: How climate change and Russian aggression are creating a perfect storm in Canada’s north – Nov 12, 2022

President Vladimir Putin held talks on Friday with top security officials about the status of Russia’s efforts to legally expand the outer boundaries of its continental shelf in the Arctic Ocean.

Russia in 2021 filed a submission to the United Nations seeking to redefine its continental shelf, which is believed to contain vast untapped reservoirs of oil and gas. Moscow said at the time it wanted much more Arctic seabed, a move that has implications for Canada and Denmark who have their own claims.

A continental shelf is defined under international law as an area of typically shallow water bordering a country’s shoreline that is considered an extension of its territory, allowing the country to exploit its natural resources.

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Click to play video: 'Patrolling the Arctic'
Patrolling the Arctic

“We have several important issues today, colleagues, concerning both the domestic agenda and the issue of the outer limit of Russia’s continental shelf in the Arctic Ocean. Let’s get to work,” the Kremlin website cited Putin as saying.

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The Kremlin did not immediately provide further details about the meeting, which comes in the wake of pledges this week by Canada, the U.S. and other nations to provide tanks to Ukraine, as Russia’s invasion of the country nears the one-year mark.

It was attended by several high-ranking officials, including Defence Minister Sergei Shoigu and Sergei Naryshkin, the foreign intelligence chief.

Russia’s neighbours in the Arctic have become increasingly concerned about Moscow’s ambitions in the strategically important region since it sent tens of thousands of troops into Ukraine in February last year.

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NATO member states have ramped up Arctic military exercises in recent years, as Russia has expanded and renewed its military infrastructure in the region.

— Reporting by Caleb Davis and Vladimir Soldatkin; Editing by Andrew Osborn. With a file from Global News.

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