A snowy view of Tromso, a city in Norway's Arctic.

Tromso, a city in Norway's Arctic. Are better business links, with places like this, the key to developing Canada's North?
Photo Credit: (iStock)

The need for business cooperation in the Arctic

Eye on the Arctic brings you stories and newsmakers from across the North

All over the circumpolar world, business and the prosperity of indigenous communities is taking centre stage.

Canada, the current chair of the Arctic Council, has pinpointed development of the Arctic and northern communities as a priority during their two-year term.

Many of these issues were discussed this week at the Arctic Business Forum in Rovaniemi, Finland.

Challenges and opportunities

Timo Rautajoki, the president and CEO of the Lapland Chamber of Commerce in Arctic Finland.
Timo Rautajoki, the president and CEO of the Lapland Chamber of Commerce in Arctic Finland.

There, speakers from all over the Arctic talked about a range of issues including shipping, indigenous issues and the environment.

“We must learn from each other,” says Timo Rautajoki, head of the Lapland Chamber of Commerce in Finland’s Arctic, one of the conference organizers. “It’s the main goal of our activity in Lapland.”

To find out more about the challenges facing Arctic communities and what Canada and the European Arctic can learn from each other, Eye on the Arctic’s Eilís Quinn spoke to Timo Rautajoki just before the conference got underway earlier this week.

Listen

Related Links: 

Can the Arctic Council do development?, Blog by Heather Exner-Pirot, Eye on the Arctic

Arctic Business Forum

Lapland Chamber of Commerce

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Categories: Economy, Environment & Animal Life, Indigenous, International, Internet, Science & Technology
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