Svalbard is tourism's final frontier, and a place at the limits of human endurance. A frozen archipelago between Greenland and Russia, it's the most remote of the Arctic Circle's wildernesses and an eerie, haunted place, full of ghost towns and abandoned mining settlements. The remains of trapper huts crumble along clifftops, a testament to lost dreams. For those attracted to the far reaches of the earth, it holds an almost mythical allure. To journey here is to follow in the footsteps of legendary explorers, who saw a stark, dangerous beauty in this unforgiving landscape of ice, where polar bears outnumber residents and the sun refuses to rise for almost half of the year.
Today, many of those who visit here-the most northerly inhabited place in the world, a three-hour flight from Oslo and around 965km from the North Pole itself-hope to see bears, though the Norwegian government is fiercely protective of these elusive creatures and searching for them is forbidden. In fact, new sustainable-tourism guidelines introduced last year discourage using the polar bears as a focus for any marketing material.
Svalbard is one of the best-protected ecosystems on earth, with seven national parks and 23 stunning nature reserves covering most of the islands. Still, it's a fragile place and rising sea temperatures resulting from climate change mean the ice pack is shrinking, sending bears further north each year as their hunting grounds melt. Everyone is guaranteed at least one sighting, however: the arrivals hall at the tiny airport in Svalbard's capital Longyearbyen is dominated by a large polar bear, stuffed and forever frozen astride the baggage carousel.
This story is from the February 2024 edition of Harper's BAZAAR Singapore.
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This story is from the February 2024 edition of Harper's BAZAAR Singapore.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.
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