Thinning Arctic ice reveals naval capability gaps and new opportunities
The Virginia-class fast-attack submarine USS Delaware (SSN 791) is one of the US Navy’s vessels that can operate in Arctic conditions. (Photo: Defense Visual Information Distribution Service)
The Arctic is no longer a frozen frontier of secondary concern. Record-low ice extents, intensifying Russian naval activity and growing allied interest in under-ice deterrence have converged to make subsea operations in the High North a capability challenge.
At UDT 2026 in London, Eisha Home, senior marine engineer at BMT, a UK-headquartered maritime design, engineering and risk management consultancy, laid out the scale of the challenge.
Speaking during a session, Home outlined the environmental and technological barriers that must be overcome if allied submarines are to maintain deterrence in the region.
A changing environment, an unchanged imperative
NASA’s Scientific Visualization
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