Barentsburg is a Russian coal-mining town on Norway's Svalbard archipelago. Photo: Thomas Nilsen

Russia wants Barentsburg food supplies shipped via mainland Norway

The Russian Embassy in Oslo warns of a humanitarian emergency at the country’s mining society on Svalbard this coming winter if Norway doesn’t open its land border at Storskog for two containers with seven tons of food supplies from Murmansk.

The food could have been shipped directly to Barentsburg from the port of Murmansk. Instead, the two containers were sent by truck towards the port of Tromsø in northern Norway from where they were supposed to be transported onboard a Norwegian cargo boat to Svalbard.

The truck, however, was stopped at Storskog, the land-border checkpoint at the only road between the two countries, reports E24, a Norwegian business online.

It was in late April Norway closed its seaports and land border for Russian cargo traffic under the EU’s 5th package of sanctions.

Storskog border checkpoint. Photo: Thomas Nilsen

Aleksandr Veselov is chief of Trust Arktigugol, the Russian state-owned company in charge of all businesses in Barentsburg. He writes in a letter to the Governor of Svalbard that Norway should exempt food supplies from the sanctions, the E24 reports.

If the border-crossing problems continue, and preparation for the winter season is affected, this could cause a “humanitarian emergency,” Veselov writes in the letter.

Some 400 Russians and Ukrainians live in Barentsburg. Svalbard is under full Norwegian sovereignty, but according to a 1925 treaty, all signatory countries are granted non-discriminatory rights to fishing, hunting and exploring mineral resources. For Russia, that means coal mining.

Russia’s Consul General in Barentsburg, Sergei Gustshin, says to E24 that there is no immediate crisis. “There is no shortage of food now.”

The request from the Russian diplomates to open for food supplies is sent to Norway’s Foreign Ministry.

Also the diplomates themself are currently traveling to Svalbard via the land border at Storskog as all aviation between Russia and Western Europe has stopped. In Norway, Russia has a Consulate General in Kirkenes and in Barentsburg, in addition to the Embassy in Oslo.

More photos from Barentsburg are in the gallery below.

Barentsburg panorama. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Barentsburg with the Grønfjord glacier. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
The new restaurant Krasniy Medved (Red bear). Photo: Thomas Nilsen
With Lenin in front, the stele honouring communism was erected in 1974 to mark Svalbard's first multi-storey residential building. The text reads "Our goal is communism". The slogan in the mountain reads Mir i Mir - (Peace and Earth). Photo: Thomas Nilsen
A growing number of tourists are visiting Barentsburg. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Souvenir shop in Barentsburg. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Nordenskiöld glacier. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Norwegian post service in Barentsburg. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Arctic foxes. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
The coal plant in Barentsburg consumes about 30,000 tons of coal annually. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Ivan Velichenko shows a bottle of the town's own vodka named Barentsburg. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Nordre Isfjorden National Park. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
The new hotel in Barentsburg has room for 90 guests. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Lunchtime for this polar bear cub. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Old Finnish houses in Barentsburg. Nordre Isfjorden National Park in the background. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
A polar bear and a reindeer are on display in a corner at the library in Barentsburg. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
The polar bear in the library wears helmet. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Upgrades of the infrastructure in Barentsburg. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Coal mine facilities. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
GoArctica's boat is painted in Ukrainian colours. About 60% of the people living in Barentsburg are Ukrainians. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
GoArctic's boat "Barentsburg" has both Norwegian and Russian flag in the mast. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Russia has a rather large Consulate General in Barentsburg. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Waste sorting. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Samovar (tea boiler). Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Arcticugol Spitsbergen is the state-owned company in charge of all activities in Barentsburg. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Rail tracks into the coal mine in Barentsburg. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Coal miner. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Coal mine. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Going deep-down. Mining operation today happens at 1,200 meters deep. Workers need about an hour to get down. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Back up after a long nights work in the mine. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
All coal mining happens underground. Photo: Thomas Nislen
Coal harbour from where ships bring the coal to England. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Maybe not the highlight of a guided tour in Arctic Barentsburg. The mine's waste dump. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
The cultural palace has seats for 450 people. That is about everyone who lives in Barentsburg. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Kola Science Centre has a research station in Barentsburg. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Both Barentsburg and Pyramiden have their own vodka brands. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
Nordenskiöld glacier. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
The three-mast sail­ing ship An­tigua at the Nordenskiöld glacier, Svalbard. Photo: Thomas Nilsen
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