Demands for Icebreaker Tours Spiral

October 4, 2015

 

Plans to terminate commercial tours to the North Pole on the nuclear-powered icebreakers of the Atomflot company in 2016 have surged the demand for these tours.

Sergey Shirokiy, the chief of the tourist department of the Russian Arctic national park summed up the results of the tourist season.

Over the six years since the opening of the park on the Franz Joseph Land high-latitude archipelago, it was visited by a record number of 1,225 tourists from 41 countries this year.

"Russian state atomic energy corporation Rosatom (which owns Atomflot) said last year it would terminate the cruises to the North Pole and this led up to an agitated demand this year," Shirokiy said. "Seven cruises were made instead of the initially scheduled five ones."

However, Atomflot said later its nuclear icebreakers would continue making cruises to the Pole.

One more factor that stimulated the increase of the tourist flow was the opening of a border crossing checkpoint on Alexandra Land Island, which makes it possible the arrival of ships right away from Svalbard, Norway, TASS reports.

A trip to Franz Joseph Land offers an opportunity to see some rare animals, the largest bird colonies in the northern hemisphere, the samples of Arctic vegetation, glaciers, cliffs, and remainders of winter camps of the explorers who came there from end of the 16th century through the beginning of the 20th century.

The park was set up in June 2009. It embraces the northern part of the Severny (Northern) island of the Novaya Zemlya archipelago, the Greater Oranje and the Smaller Oranje Islands, which are also part of Novaya Zemlya, and some others.

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