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United States, Canada to negotiate maritime limit in Beaufort Sea

The United States and Canada on Tuesday said they will develop a task force this fall to work out the maritime border in the Beaufort Sea and solve the overlap along the continental rack.

The group will work toward a last agreement covering the border location, which lies north of Alaska and the Canadian provinces of Yukon and the Northwest Territories, the 2 nations said.

The negotiations come amid a rise in cooperation between Russia and China in the Arctic Sea, where they eye mineral resources and new shipping paths discovered by melting ice amidst rising temperature levels.

The conflict in between Canada and the United States in the Beaufort Sea is an enduring dispute over the maritime border off the coast of Yukon and Alaska, an environmentally sensitive region that has several oil and gas deposits.

The border disagreement is rooted in the 1825 Anglo-Russian treaty, which was inherited by the United States in 1867 and Canada in 1880. The 2 nations have different interpretations of the treaty's significance.

The U.S. federal government had actually unveiled actions in 2015 to make almost 3 million acres of the area forever off limitations for oil and gas leasing as President Joe Biden tried to stabilize his goals of decarbonizing the U.S. economy and maintaining beautiful wilderness.

The administration's action developed on an Obama-era restriction and effectively blocked U.S. Arctic waters to oil exploration.

(source: Reuters)