After Greenland, is Canada’s Arctic next?
What looks like climate change on the surface is rapidly turning into a full-scale geopolitical confrontation in the far north.
As Arctic ice melts, entirely new sea routes are opening—routes that could rewrite global trade, energy control, and military power. At the center of this shift lies Canada’s Arctic, home to the Northwest Passage, vast untapped resources, and one of the most strategically sensitive regions on Earth .
But here’s the problem: Canada controls the geography, not the leverage.
For decades, Canada has remained economically and logistically tied to the United States—from oil refining and pipelines to Arctic defense and shipping security. Despite sitting on massive energy reserves, Canada still exports raw resources south at a discount and buys back finished products at full price, a structural dependence shaped not by politics—but by geography itself .
Greenland exposed a larger truth:
The Arctic is no longer peripheral. It is the next global chokepoint.
Washington does not need tanks or invasions to assert influence. Control today is exercised through:
• shipping law and “international waters” claims
• naval presence and icebreaker dominance
• energy infrastructure and refining capacity
• security guarantees that quietly redefine sovereignty
The disagreement over whether the Northwest Passage is Canada’s internal waterway or an international corridor is not symbolic—it determines who controls the future of global trade.
If Canada loses leverage here, the Arctic won’t be taken by force.
It will be absorbed by systems, treaties, logistics, and “shared responsibility.”
And the question viewers must ask is simple:
After Greenland, can Canada actually defend its Arctic—economically, legally, and strategically?
This live session breaks down:
• why the Arctic is becoming more valuable than oil
• how geography traps Canada into dependence
• why the U.S. cannot afford to let rivals dominate the North
• and what happens if Canada’s Arctic becomes “international” in practice
This is not speculation.
This is the quiet phase before the shift.
Stay till the end—because once the Arctic fully opens, there is no reset button.
🔴 LIVE DISCUSSION | Geopolitics | Arctic Strategy | Canada–US Power Dynamics
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