The Boston Globe

The first US deep-water port for the Arctic to host cruise ships, military

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ANCHORAGE, Alaska — The cruise ship with about 1,000 passengers anchored off Nome, too big to squeeze into the tundra city’s tiny port. Its well-heeled tourists had to shimmy into small boats for another ride to shore.

It was 2016, and at the time, the cruise ship Serenity was the largest vessel ever to sail through the Northwest Passage.

But as the Arctic sea ice relents under the pressures of global warming and opens shipping lanes across the top of the world, more tourists are venturing to Nome — a northwest Alaska destinatio­n known better for the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race and its 1898 gold rush than luxury travel.

The problem remains: There’s no place to park the big boats. That’s expected to change as a $600 million-plus expansion makes Nome, population 3,500, the nation’s first deep-water Arctic port. The expansion, expected to be operationa­l by the end of the decade, will accommodat­e not just larger cruise ships of up to 4,000 passengers, but cargo ships to deliver additional goods for the 60 Alaska Native villages in the region, and military vessels to counter the presence of Russian and Chinese ships in the Arctic.

It’s a prospect that excites business owners and officials in Nome but concerns others who worry about the impact of additional tourists and vessel traffic on the environmen­t and animals Alaska Natives depend on.

The expansion will “support our local economy and the local artists here, the Indigenous artists having access to the visitors and teaching and sharing our culture and our language and how we how we make our beautiful art,” said Alice Bioff, an Inupiaq resident of Nome.

 ?? NOME PORT DIRECTOR JOY BAKER/CITY OF NOME VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The luxury cruise ship Crystal Serenity anchored offshore in 2017 because it was too big to dock at the Port of Nome, Alaska. A $600 million-plus expansion in Nome should make it the nation’s first deepwater Arctic port. It’s expected to be operationa­l by the end of the decade.
NOME PORT DIRECTOR JOY BAKER/CITY OF NOME VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS The luxury cruise ship Crystal Serenity anchored offshore in 2017 because it was too big to dock at the Port of Nome, Alaska. A $600 million-plus expansion in Nome should make it the nation’s first deepwater Arctic port. It’s expected to be operationa­l by the end of the decade.

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