Arctic Governance, Geopolitics, and Security
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from Polar Record

Geopolitics of Rare Earth Elements in the Arctic

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Kirunavaara and Kiruna Iron Mine in Kiruna (Sweden) as seen from Luossavaara at sunset in 2022.
Kirunavaara and Kiruna Iron Mine in Kiruna (Sweden) as seen from Luossavaara at sunset in 2022.

Abstract

Rare Earth Elements (REEs) are essential for green energy technologies and defense systems, yet global supply chains remain concentrated in China. This has intensified geopolitical competition for alternative sources, positioning the Arctic as a strategic frontier, as retreating ice exposes mineral deposits. A comprehensive discourse analysis of strategic documents, scholarly literature, and media sources from 2010 to 2025 reveals a dramatic shift from geological characterization and economic speculation to urgent securitization and strategic alliance formation. Academic research has evolved from establishing natural baselines to governance and social conflict analysis. Media coverage of REE in the Arctic peaked in 2025, with rising emphasis on governance, sovereignty, geopolitics, and Greenland’s strategic position. Critical gaps persist in addressing Indigenous rights, holistic impact assessments, and Arctic-specific innovation. Sustainable Arctic REE development requires integrated frameworks that balance geopolitical imperatives with environmental protection and Indigenous self-determination, preventing the region from becoming a sacrifice zone for global decarbonization.

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Recommended citation

Middleton, Alexandra. “Geopolitics of Rare Earth Elements in the Arctic.” Polar Record, January 29, 2026

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